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The Recovery Console is designed to help you recover from a error that prevents Windows XP from starting properly. This tool is located on
the Windows XP installation disc. This guide will show you how to install the Recovery Console onto your system. |
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Mailing lists can save you time if you frequently send ‘round robin’ messages. One important consideration is that your recipients may not
want their e-mail addresses displayed for all to see. This can be prevented by making use of the 'BCC' facility, first of all though, create the mailing list. |
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Please Note: This update is part of a series, The Seven Deadly Sins of Email, written by Squeezebox.
This update includes the 7th installment (of seven).
Not everyone has the full Microsoft Office, nor does everyone have Works. I suppose that most of my contacts have Word installed, but not all
have Excel, PowerPoint, Publisher (the right version) and Access. How frustrating for someone to spend ages downloading that huge file you sent them, only to find
out that they can’t even open it!
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Please Note: This update is part of a series, The Seven Deadly Sins of Email, written by Squeezebox.
This update includes the 6th instalment (of seven).
Maybe most people have broadband now, and maybe they can download larger files. BUT, large attachments clog up the system (email downloads
don’t transfer at broadband speeds) and fill up hard drives. Many people still have dial-up or maybe a capped broadband service. They aren’t going to thank you for
that nice 4mb picture you sent them that took twenty minutes to download! |
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Please Note: This update is part of a series, The Seven Deadly Sins of Email, written by Squeezebox.
This update includes the 5th instalment (of seven).
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Hate them, don’t you? All of those indent marks (vertical bold liners in HTML
messages) just clutter the content up and make reading it disjointed. You can set your messages to leave out the indents as default.
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Please Note: This update is part of a series, The Seven Deadly Sins of Email, written by Squeezebox.
This update includes the 4th instalment (of seven).
HTML (or Rich Text) is fine for sending messages with images, formatted fonts and backgrounds, and it is OK to use it for the fun stuff. But
HTML comes with a price. Every message in HTML is taking up more space on your hard disk and longer to download than simple text messages. Add to that the concern
that HTML can include malicious code, albeit unlikely in a message you have created.
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