Well iranitea, every little bit helps, even cute gestures (-: Maybe you need to 
install Dolphin to make it more mobile friendly. Again, just something that 
appeared in one of the posts about all this. I'm kind of fascinated by various 
aspects of the change. For example, that some posts appear with new From 
content and some with old. Lots of posts change fonts from one paragraph to 
another. 




________________________________
 From: iranitea <no_re...@yahoogroups.com>
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Monday, September 2, 2013 5:31 AM
Subject: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: 20 Big Questions.
 


  
Share, not really better on a mobile for me, as it takes more time to load, and 
the text doesn't wrap. Maybe it's ideal for tablets, I can't say. The only 
difference is there *is* a separate mobile layout, which has certain gestures, 
that are kind of cute. 



--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com> wrote:


salyavin, from what I gather from various posts, it sounds like it's better for 
mobile devices.



________________________________
 From: "fintlewoodlewix@..." <fintlewoodlewix@...>
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Sunday, September 1, 2013 10:10 AM
Subject: [FairfieldLife] RE: 20 Big Questions.
 


  
Some more questions:

How do I make it say Salyavin rather than my email address?

How can I make the paragraph breaks I put in stay put? 

Is any of this actually an advantage or did yahoo change everything just for 
the hell of it?


--- In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, <fintlewoodlewix@...> wrote:


1 What is the universe made of?

Astronomers face an embarrassing conundrum: they don't know what 95% of the 
universe is made of. Atoms, which form everything we see around us, only 
account for a measly 5%. Over the past 80 years it has become clear that the 
substantial remainder is comprised of two shadowy entities â dark matter 
anddark energy. The former, first discovered in 1933, acts as an invisible 
glue, binding galaxies and galaxy clusters together. Unveiled in 1998, the 
latter is pushing the universe's expansion to ever greater speeds. Astronomers 
are closing in on the true identities of these unseen interlopers.
The rest:
http://www.theguardian.com/science/2013/sep/01/20-big-questions-in-science

Just a test to see if everything works the same as it did under the old 
system... 


 

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