I normally don't read forwards if they start off with lines of lines of
who they came from, but I did read this one. lol Since I don't watch much
TV I'd never had known this was an older thing, yet still demonstrative of
network TV's blatency nonetheless. Yes it would be nice to have forwards
cleaned up, usually all you have to do is press forward or however you do
it in your program, then scroll down to where the message starts, hold
down the shift key and press CTRL HOME and it will highlight all that and
then just hit spacebar, or backspace, or delete button or something.
Also as long as we're on the clean it up topic, I hope I'm not out of line
here with this request, but there are a few who may not know that they are
sending garble with their messages, I think html e-mail to a text only
list. Please check your email programs to either see how you can change
your settings to send only text mail or how you can change individual mails
to the list here as plain text mail. I'm not picking but for helps sake I
know Amy, Karen, Sharon's are as such. If you guys use Eudora at all and
want help I can do that off list, just let me know I'd be glad to help as
you probably don't know you are doing this or have ability to prevent it maybe.
Brad
At 09:34 AM 1/24/2006 -0500, you wrote:
>Jen, and everybody,
>It would really be appreciated if, when you are passing on mass
>emails, such as the one that Jen just sent about ABC, that you take a
>few minutes to just clean it up. It's easy. Copy and paste it into
>Microsoft word and just delete all the junk out of it and then paste
>it back into a clean email ready to send. It would sure save time on
>the part of the receiver. . If you don't have the time, to do
>that, then ask yourself how important your message really is? First
>of all, that email is more than two years old and ABC has already
>addressed the issue and apologized for the incident. I'm more
>concerned about their show "Desperate Housewives," personally.
>Kathy
Brad
"A man who works with his hands is a laborer;
a man who works with his hands and his brain is a craftsman;
but a man who works with his hands and his brain and his heart is an
artist." --Louis Nizer
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