Douglas McAdam wrote:
Thank you Jay. Believe it or not I did not know this but also I do not recall ever changing a duplicate without throwing away the original. But an alias is better now that you explained it to me. I'm one of those dummies who simply goes and does things and gets confused with computer manuals. Sometimes I jokingly say that ex politicians write computer manuals cause they cause me to go around in circles, but the problem is that most programmers and manual writers assume we all know certain things when we don't in our generation. So thanks for the suggestion, and this is another reason why I like this group. I do hope I can talk my granddaughter into using CE but she is a diehard Mail person and until I can afford my own machine I have to put up with Mail. Its not all that bad but I prefer CE. I still don't understand why those who produce modern mail programs do not incorporate what CE has.

doug


On Nov 13, 2006, at 12:15 AM, Jay S wrote:

Douglas McAdam wrote:
> Thank you so much Yersinia-
> I fooled around according to your instructions and found I could
> make a duplicate copy of a Quark and Apple Document, put them on
> the Desktop and then opened the Apps. and then opened the files.  I
>  also double clicked on them and that worked too.

I imagine that you already know this, but in case you don't: If it is a DUPLICATE of the files, and not an ALIAS of the files, that you have placed on your desktop, when you change the one on the desktop, the original WILL NOT change. Once you make a copy in a different location, you have two distinct files which do not relate to each other. If you decide to keep copies on the desktop, trash the ones that are there now, then go back to the originals and create aliases of them. Then, when you open the alias on the desktop, the original will actually be the one that opens.

Do you and your granddaughter share the same email address? If not, then there is no reason that you can't use Emailer while she uses Mail. All you need to do is remove your sbcglobal.net account from Mail, and set up your account in Emailer. Multiple email applications can run on the same computer at the same time. The only problem for you would be if your granddaughter doesn't want you to run Classic. Otherwise, go ahead and fire up Emailer once again.

---Jay

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