When I opened the message, I found that Wayne Johnson had written:

> For the average user doing a MD5 check on a downloaded file tells us 
> that we've rec'd not only the complete download but the correct file 
> just in case someone might have hijacked the link. On many websites 
> you may see a # like MD5: 0770d3cd549ecb06ec38a3390eae3e6d & if your 
> download's MD5 Hash doesn't match then you've got a bad or wrong 
> download. This is what he's been trying to say.

Yes, I now know <smile>.

But telling me to MD5 it, was all greek to me.  It isn't now, but it's still 
pretty geeky <smile>.

Regards,

Jim

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