I think both are good as long as you know the person's name you send to. Especially using fax, sometimes people in the company use one fax machine, if you don't specify the person's name and title, it's hard for the receiption or other people to distribute your resume. ' _2 `2 Y+ ~& n+ G* x% l# c" ~# Q, D
Email is a common way to send resume these days. You could put cover letter in the content, so the receiver will know your attachment is not a virus related file.
" W: q* E3 U% h % X$ N' m2 y9 K. C7 x 9 `2 f/ M# V! l这种方式真不需要付传真费? 还是疑惑中 ( O, t, n/ ~3 P/ T. v% W你总得拨对方的区号加传真号码吧 3 ]) I R% U( l9 e) ^* C4 F' f& ]+ u. I3 Z, x+ R. Q" g( g
真是这样, 赶紧去买Modem& F4 y, N; I& k* T3 Q4 M o
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谢谢你.
When you use email, be sure to use the right encoding. I have emailed some company with the default encoding (which was Chinese simplified) on my computer. It turned out to be a disarster. My email of course turned out to be unrecognized characters since their default encoding is English. The HR people are apparently not brave enough to figure out what is going with it. They simply just discard it. It was a costly lesson.