An alternative is to embed the long URL in the "<" & ">" character.
Most email clients then treat the long string of enclosed characters
as a single token. Example:
<http://www.elecraft.com/K2_Manual_Download_Page.htm#K2>

IMHO I'd rather see the whole URL in an email. Safety first, I want to
know what site I going to...etc.
--
73 Rod, Ai7NN  ~*~*~Happy Holidays~*~*~

On Dec 26, 2007 7:03 AM, Leo Bricker K5LDB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> ... Also, anyone posting a URL in a message should go to
> www.tinyurl.com and convert it before inputting it. There's no excuse to
> have a long URL in a message anymore.
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