I promise, I didn't do this as an "I told you so". But after such emphatic resistance to what I knew to be fact, I just had to be sure I wasn't suddenly living in some parallel universe.
"Hanagan" is one of my other accounts that resides on one of my old Wintel boxes running the Courier program that I've mentioned more than once. Every line break I typed made it through all those "server" breakers that have been touted as being the problem when typing properly (say "old school"), not lazy-let-the-program-do-my-type/thinking-for-me-so-I- don't-have-to-be-bothered-and-where's-my-microwaved-McNuggets- anyway typing ad-infinitum with total disregard for proper typing techniques. And just as before, it was only a difference of around 15 characters. So, after imperial demonstration, PM breaks my typing early, other email clients don't, and neither do any of the multitude of servers in between as my email showed up EXACTLY as I typed it - just as it has for the past (drum roll please......) yup, 9 years. Oh, and, note the quoted text below.... Broken early by PM just as expected, and as compared to the original email. So now we all know what is going on. No longer a need to try to convince anyone of anything. The facts speak for themselves. And boy was it getting tiring trying to get the point across when no one would listen beyond their own attachment to forlorn ideals. I still do like the program though. I just would still also like to see this bug fixed. Thanks gang. Have fun, ht ////////////////\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ On 11/24/03, Hanagan wrote: >I just wanted to take a moment to thank the makers of PowerMail for such >a great >looking program. >So far, things seem to be working pretty nicely. >I was wondering though, before I spend the money, could anyone give me an >idea >of what some of the things I should watch out for are? > >I know there's no such thing as a perfect program. But if someone could >give me some >of the things that are still in the works, things that could be a >stumbling block, or other >quirks that I should be aware of. > >Any suggestions would be appreciated. > >TIA. Hanagan > >

