Tony Sleep wrote: (manually trimmed...)
<<> Tony, I am impressed with the way you trim your quotes.
Nope, it's the mail client I use - just highlight the bit I want quoted,
press
'c' to comment, then 'Ctrl/Q' to copy the quote across. Ameol is a
dedicated
piece of s/w which also functions as an offline reader for conferencing at
CIX
(www.cix.co.uk) and usenet. But ISTR that Eudora behaved similarly, just
pasting highlighted sections to comments as quotes. Don't know about
Outlook, I
installed the full version, looked at it and ran away:)
Not related to one Suzy Demuth are you?>>
Tony, when I saw your post I knew you must be handling your quoting in an
easier way. Before writing you, I researched your mail client via
Properties and Details, then looked up Ameol, downloaded it and used it. I
liked it, especially the way it handled the threads, but working
intuitively, and with using "Help," I never figured out how to do the
procedure you outlined above. I knew there must be a way. I have Ameol on
another PC. I am looking forward to working the procedure later today.
Thanks!
I do not believe I have met Suzy. I suspect she is in the UK. I am in
Arkansas, USA. Perhaps, you can introduce me some day.
Your comment in another post:
<<This is a social space like a pub or cafe to an extent, so you can talk
about
whatever you want so long as consensus permits, but please bear in mind
that
there is a majority of people who may seldom say anything but are here for
an
interest in filmscanners.>>
Since we are talking over coffee, let me introduce myself. I am Marvin
Demuth of West Memphis, AR. I love imaging of every form. I am age 70. I
started with a box camera at age 12. I sold 4,200 8x10 B&W prints at $1.00
each my senior year in college, all developed in our kitchen. I am retired
now, having earned our living in suretyship and insurance. I have a color
darkroom. I am making the transition to digital and I am looking forward
to producing digitally produced prints 20 x XXX, the way I can
photographically via chemicals at present. I am ready to get away from the
chemicals. The results are great, but, unless you have a considerable
block of time for using them, continuously, they deteriorate. One of the
greatest benefits of digital is being able to pick up the process and put
it down.
My interests go beyond prints and web scanning. I am currently working on
multi-media presentations that will be projected via DLP technology
(Digital Light Processing). I joined to group to study which multi-format
film scanner to purchase.
My primary interest is communication...in every form. Film scanning permits
one form of communication. As you well know, it is just one of the tools
we use. I am currently in the final stages of arranging a satellite
teleport at a remote hospital that will permit a professor at the Harvard
Medical School to communicate via video-conferencing via satellite and ISDN
lines with the world. It will be capable of handling x-ray scans between
this remote hospital and the Harvard Medical School. A web site I handle
is: http://www.pignon.org. I made all the photos in 1990 and 1998. I am
waiting currently for a digital photo from Haiti of a closeup of a bad
condition on a young man's leg that the doctors there have not been able to
handle. It will be sent immediately to specialists here in the USA for
their comments. This is communication.
I have already enjoyed all the messages. Being retired, I find the time to
be creative. I did not always have this luxury when I was working in the
corporate world.
Back to the coffee house theme. One of the greatest insurance
organizations of the world started at a coffee house in the U. K...."Lloyds
of London." It is a great theme.
It is great to meet all of you.
Marvin Demuth