Hi Paul:

Your problems with the none folder result because the name "folder" is
misleading, and the title "none" is sort of.... well, nonsensical. The none
"folder" is not really a folder, but just the root directory, which is
present in every drive. I am not completely computer savvy, and I imagine
Ann would have a better definition for you, but, in truth, the none folder
is not a folder, and that is why it is not present in the various lists of
folders you can browse from anywhere within keysoft.

As to why the file may have disappeared, the only guess I can hazard is that
perhaps your friend saved the file to her keysoft system disk, and thus it
would be erased should she do a reset.

As for strange files appearing in the "none" directory, I have a file called
keysoft.exe. It's over 1 meg in size and I've always wondered just exactly
why it's there and what its prevalence is. If it can be moved/erased, I'd
surely like to, since 1 meg on a 16 meg board is quite a large file.

Hope someone else can answer your questions more thoroughly, Laura
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Paul Henrichsen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, January 31, 2005 7:34 PM
Subject: [Braillenote] questions about the none folder


> Hi, Gang. I was talking with a bn user today and she was telling me she
was
> putting a certain document into her none folder, but that when she went
> back the next time to look for it, it wasn't there. I wondered why. So,
> that is my first question. Why wasn't the file she had previously put into
> the none folder there and if not, where had it gone?
> However, I was also puzzled as to whether there was really a none folder
> and if that didn't just mean put the file into the flash disk, but not in
a
> folder.
> She showed me how to actually get to the none folder. My none folder has a
> file in it called keyplan. I have no idea what it is or how it got there.
> But this sparked another concern.
> Unless you type in none when asked for a folder name, you don't see the
> folder. If you go to the file manager and to the directory item to list
the
> directories or folders, you can see the entire list from dictionaries to
> windows, but there is no mention of a none directory or folder.
> Why? It appears the only way you will see the none folder is if you type
in
> its name at the open prompt in keyword and only then can you add a file to
> it or see what files are in it.
> Why?
> Is this a bug or is this supposed to be a hidden folder?
> I guess you learn something new every day<grin>.
> Thanks.



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