When I go into my inbox, the first message that appears is the most recent. 
(Incidentally, I'm not sure it has always been this way.) When I am done 
reading I hit the  E-chord and say move it to trash, then the next one comes 
up. I want to start with the earliest one and work forward, not the latest one 
and work backward. Outlook, on my PC, has a way to do this, as does Outlook 
Express, I believe. If Keymail doesn't, that's fine; I just need to know.

Susie Stageberg
Iowa Department for the Blind
Project ASSIST with Windows


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Weinger,
Jerrold (DSCP)
Sent: Thursday, July 22, 2004 4:02 PM
To: 'Braillenote List'
Subject: RE: [Braillenote] Keymail Question


Susie,
Is the bottom of the list where you go when you key space-56?  If so, that
is where the most recent message is.  Possibly you could clarify what you
are asking.  I read my e-mail message, then chord-e, then chord-56 and then
read the next newer e-mail., then repeat the process to the most recent
e-mail.

Sincerely,
Jerry Weinger
 

-----Original Message-----
From: Susan Stageberg [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, July 22, 2004 4:35 PM
To: Braillenote List
Subject: [Braillenote] Keymail Question

Does anyone know how to sort messages in the Keymail inbox so the most
recent one is at the bottom? In ascending order by date, in other words. I
noted when I looked at e-mail last that mine were in descending order, which
meant I was reading conversations backwards--very disconcerting. Is there a
way to fix this?

Thanks.

Susie Stageberg
Iowa Department for the Blind
Project ASSIST with Windows



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Diane
Garrett
Sent: Thursday, July 22, 2004 3:30 PM
To: BrailleNote List
Subject: [Braillenote] NOKIA 6620


Hi, List!

I upgraded my husbands phone to a 6620 a few months ago and it was about
$39.95 for the upgrade. I wonder what the speech will increase the price to
if I wanted to upgrade. It's not much bigger than my Motorola flip phone.

The thing that attracted us was that it does not have an external antena
that could get broken off in my fanny pack that I, and my husband,  always
wear. The keys are small and strangely shaped, but I have small fingers and
it didn't bother me. Also, the hands free ear phone seems to work real nice
when my husband is on the road.

I can't wait to see if it can work with the BNQT.

 Diane Garrett/Leader Ruby
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Phone: (918) 664-5731


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