there seems to be a difference sometimes in quote in ms word and regular ascii 
when posting some things some places

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On Thursday, May 17, 2018 Frank McConnell via cctalk <cctalk@classiccmp.org> 
wrote:
On May 17, 2018, at 11:47, Fred Cisin wrote:
> 
> On Thu, 17 May 2018, Ed Sharpe via cctalk wrote:
>> yep we see them but we did not type them intentionally 
> 
> https://quoteinvestigator.com/2015/06/13/we/
> 
>> may way to adjust your mail reader reader as they do not show up in any of 
>> the mail readers we have access to.
>> Ed# 
> 
> If your email program is crapping, it is not the responsibility of everybody 
> else to "adjust" their mail readers to filter out the crap.
> This group has been remarkably tolerant of NON-ASCII content.
> 
> Many already have configurations that do such filtering, and are not seeing 
> all of the mess.
> Others just assume that your mail client, or your keyboard is BROKEN.
> Would cleaning the contacts of your space bar reduce the bounce and noise it 
> produces?
> Perhaps also repair the rest of the punctuation keys, if the keyboard has 
> any, and at least one of the shift keys.
> 
> That is assuming that it is a keyboard, and not a telegraph key, nor OCR of 
> crayon drawings.

My guess is (and has been for a while) "dictated to Cortana". And his Cortana 
is sometimes hard of hearing because the mic got buried under something.

We live in interesting times in which the future is here but not evenly 
distributed. For many modern e-mail user programs, the default character set 
for plain text is no longer US-ASCII or some local national variation but 
Unicode. And the e-mail composer works hard to notice that its user has typed a 
quotation mark so it can promote it into some other Unicode quotation mark 
(e.g. " gets turned into LEFT DOUBLE QUOTATION MARK). It then gets sent as 
text/plain, but with UTF-8 encoding; and some but not all combinations of mail 
readers and display devices can show Unicode characters in UTF-8 encoding.

So if you insist on reading your e-mail with a VT100 or even an HP 700/92, some 
e-mail is looking funny and more will; but some of the newer terminal emulators 
(e.g. Terminal.app on macOS) are capable of displaying Unicode from a received 
UTF-8 stream, and that is why reports of success with Alpine vary: people 
running it from a terminal that understands UTF-8 see the non-breaking space 
characters as blanks, while those who run it from a terminal that understands 
only US-ASCII see them as something else.

Right at the moment I am using Apple Mail and it is one of those things that 
does character promotion, and sometimes I have uses for that. I think I may 
have fixed this message, but that fixing is a conscious effort and takes some 
work to retype those quotation marks and move away from them with some care, 
and then check again before you send because sometimes it re-scans and 
re-promotes.

-Frank McConnell

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