>Considering that the majority of Internet users these days are so young
that 
>the have never seen carbon paper, 

Regardless of age, if you were a trouble maker in school, you got quickly
acquainted with it.  In 4th grade, I remember having to write 5000 times:
"When singing Old Dan Tucker, I will not call him Old D*mn F*cker". 

Carbon paper saved me about 4000 sentences. 

My parents were not pleased.


-----Original Message-----
From: Chris Garrigues [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, October 09, 2000 1:53 PM
To: Brett Randall
Cc: Robin S. Socha; qmail
Subject: Re: qmail list reply-to 


> From:  "Brett Randall" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Date:  Mon, 9 Oct 2000 07:00:06 +1000
>
> > Then the sender should ask for a Cc: - remember kids, it isn't called
> > Courtesy Copy for nothing.
> 
> I thought it was Carbon Copy?

Considering that the majority of Internet users these days are so young that

the have never seen carbon paper, that term seems to be as obsolete as 
"dialing" a telephone.

At Stan Freburg said, "That went out with button shoes!"

Chris

-- 
Chris Garrigues                 http://www.DeepEddy.Com/~cwg/
virCIO                          http://www.virCIO.Com
4314 Avenue C                   
Austin, TX  78751-3709          +1 512 374 0500

  My email address is an experiment in SPAM elimination.  For an
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    Nobody ever got fired for buying Microsoft,
      but they could get fired for relying on Microsoft.


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