On 06/09/2011 03:55, John Little wrote:
Off topic digression...
On Sep 6, 10:31 am, sc<[email protected]> wrote:
On Monday, September 05, 2011 16:37:39 Jacky Liu wrote:
Plus: what does the "CC" mean?
cc is a throwback to the days we used typewriters -- carbon
paper was used to make two copies at once, the underneath copy
being called a "carbon copy" of the original
Some claim that's a false etymology, use of cc to indicate 'copies'
came long before carbon paper was invented.
Regards, John
CC is "Copia conoscenza" in Italian, literally "Copy for knowledge"
You send out a copy to give somebody notice of the original letter
you received.
CCn ("Copia conoscenza nascosta", "Hidden copy for knowledge")
is our bCC
I guess if the term comes from latin like P.S. ("Post Scriptum")
or whatever.
--
Wyrmskull
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