On 29 Aug 2003 at 9:28, Ricky Lomey wrote: > What will happen on 3 September as it says the FAQ document expires? I > managed to get the documents at work and most at home except > http://www.expita.com/howto1.html which I hope grabpage wil still send. The > note on the document expiring is on the [EMAIL PROTECTED]
These are all good questions which we might have to address collectively. Gerry Boyd, the current ACCMail FAQ maintainer, has already stated that he intends to retire -- in effect he already has retired. I doubt if the FAQ will disappear on 3 September, even from the mit.edu site, but it will of course become outdated -- unless the work is carried on by another person or persons. The documents on expita.com are part of Mr Boyd's own website. I guess they will disappear quite soon. Get them now, while you can. > 1. Regarding the King James Bible search, is there also a similar way to > search the holy books of other religions? > 2. Is t-mail also able to translate web pages. > 3. Can one search the Britannica or any other encyclopedia for information > on events or people's names or famous people in a way similar to the > dictionary described in the FAQ? > 4. How do you do what I call third party conversion with the PDF convertion > service? > 5. I understand there is a text to html convertion service but what about > the reverse as I often find html a problem? > 6. Where can I find out about the E-mail to snail mail services in different > countries? I don't have answers right now to those specific questions. But I do think there is a case for a new edition of the ACCMail FAQ. -- szs `at` szs `dot` net ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ACCMAIL Info (automatically generated) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To UNSUBscribe: Send UNSUBSCRIBE ACCMAIL to [EMAIL PROTECTED] To get the ACCMAIL FAQ: Send e-mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" and enter only this line in the BODY of the note: send usenet/news.answers/internet-services/access-via-email ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~