Michelle inadvertantly sent this reply only to me earlier today. She has asked me to forward to the list.
Susan ---------------- Begin Forwarded Message ---------------- Date: 4/1/02 4:56 PM Received: 4/1/02 8:37 PM From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Susan Grose, [EMAIL PROTECTED] From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Michelle Steiner) To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Monday, April 1, 2002, at 12:10 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Actually, I have a question for you. When I am reading the Connection > Status Window, it only tells me I am receiving message 1,2, etc of 20 or > whatever. It does not tell me the title of the message. How do you set > it up to do that? Is that a difference in dialing in via modem vs > collecting via TCP/IP or while logged in to the internet? It's a difference between connecting to a POP3 server or to AOL, regardless of the method of connection. BTW, I understand her problem. She sees a subject while she's reading the connection status window, but unless the subject contains the name of the mailing list, she has no idea where it is filed without looking in side each folder for it--and color coding the mail with the mail actions doesn't help because she can't see the color coding until she opens the folder. There are solutions for her problem, though. One is as you and a few others suggested--to use a log file. However, I think there's a better solution. Press command-F, and enter the subject she's looking for in the text entry box; click "all folders" and check the "subject only" check box. --Michelle We're not human beings having a spiritual experience. We're spiritual beings having a human experience. ----------------- End Forwarded Message ----------------- ___________________________________________________________________________ To unsubscribe send a mail message with a SUBJECT line of "unsubscribe" to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> or <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

