Hello Thomas,

Wednesday, November 13, 2002, 4:14:54 AM, you wrote:

TF> The same happens to the frame edges when you want to drag them with
TF> the mouse on some old monitors. Those monitors didn't have a
TF> de-ioniser, which is what can be compared to an automatic
TF> rail-cleaning feature upon shut-down (like a modern TV set gets rid of
TF> static electricity on the screen when you turn it off). So the frame
TF> edge gets "hooked" there. You have already found out the computer
TF> equivalent of "jerking" it.

This *has* to be a joke post .... or is it ????

Maybe Fernando should try turning the monitor on one side and shaking
the errant frame loose, but not too hard or all the letters from the
text will end up in a heap on the bottom < lol >

-- 
Best regards,
 Barry2
Using The Bat! v1.61 on Windows 98 4.10 Build  2222


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