Yep Mike. And I don't think anyone should be allowed to get behind the wheel
of an automobile until he's driven at least 20,000 miles.

The only way I was ever able to get experience doing anything from eating to
making love was to do it the first time and then go on from there.

And although 82 years old, my first personal computer was a 29 pound Compaq
portable. That after working on an HP that the basic program was stored on a
flexible piece of plastic about 2" x 8".

You got to crawl before you can walk or run.

Art Seddon

----- Original Message -----
From: <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, December 16, 2009 3:56 PM
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] digest option is one way . . .


gacyusers.com>
X-SpamScore: 1.5tests=SGID_FROM_MTA_HEADER
Envelope-To: [email protected]

[email protected] wrote:

> I would like to comment on this listserv, although I have not been
> subscribed for very long.

Strictly speaking, this is a mailing-list not a listserv. Reason

LISTSERV is a registered trademark with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
and the Swedish Patent and Registration Office, PRV. As such, using the word
"listserv" to describe a different product or as a generic term for any
email-based mailing list of that kind is a trademark misuse. The standard
generic terms are electronic mailing list, elist, or email list for the list
itself, and email list manager or email list software for the software
product
that manages the list

> 1.  I have read many messages that were not
> about verifying one's subscription, although that was the subject line.

People just don't know what they're supposed to be doing :-) We have many
elderly people on this list, and often, this is their first, tentative foray
into the world of electronic communication. I still believe (like others)
that
computers should not be sold to the elderly without a Health Warning and a
mandatory exhortation to try and learn about how things work on the Internet
before they take the training wheels off. Failure to do so can cause ire on
the part of the younger and more knowledgeable members of this group and the
Internet in general.

> 2.  I have read many messages that appear to be totally personal and not
> directed to my attention, with misleading subject lines.

Tough! That's the nature of a mailing-list. You receive everything that gets
sent to the list - whether you want it or not and regardless of whether
you're
interested in it or not.

> 3.  My inbox was already filling up way too fast for me with all kinds
> of spam; now it's twice as full with individual messages from this user
> group.

Learn to manage your Inbox. Filters are very useful despite the slightly
un-intuitive way that they have been implemented by bothe Yahoo! and Google,
Alternatively, find an ISP that will stop 98% of the spam from ever reaching
your Inbox. Mine does.

--
Best regards,
Mike Fry
Johannesburg.



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