My main concern is downloads automatically go to OneNote.
How can I stop this behavior?
Charles Hart Enzer, M.D., FAACAP
Volunteer Associate Professor of Psychiatry
University of Cincinnati Medical Center
On Aug 4, 2016 01:10, "Man-wai Chang" wrote:
> OneNote has optical character recognition
OneNote has optical character recognition (OCR) capability!
On Thu, Aug 4, 2016 at 10:36 AM, Charles Hart Enzer, M.D.
wrote:
> OneNote on WIN 10.
>
> I don't want OneNote.
>
> I certainly do not want third parties downloading to OneNote -- such a
> Kindle.
>
> How do I remove OneNote? I have alr
OneNote on WIN 10.
I don't want OneNote.
I certainly do not want third parties downloading to OneNote -- such a
Kindle.
How do I remove OneNote? I have already removed Office.
*Shai / שי Charles Hart Enzer, M.D., FAACAPVolunteer Associate Professor of
PsychiatryUniversity of Cincinnati M
That's weird - because at one point on my desktop PC - a big window came up
after I missed the deadline - and it complains I missed out on the Free
upgrade! Guess I will have to read that ZDNet article...
Regards,
Kurt Wendt
Senior Systems Analyst
Tel. +1-212-747-9100
www.GlobeTax.com
-
Note, also, that the total size of the files will be less than the
total size they take on disk. Because of the way FAT and NTFS allocate
large blocks of the disk, a bunch of small files will take up a lot
more space on the disk than you may imagine.
Of course, there's a VFP function to tell you c
According to ZD net:
"Windows 10 free upgrade is still available using Windows 7 and 8 product keys"
"In spite of the official end of the free Windows 10 update offer on
July 29, it seems any valid Windows 7/8.x retail product key still
installs Windows 10 for now."
http://www.zdnet.com/article/
Yes, it totalizes every file that encounters traversing all subdirs. May be
an "H" must be added to the "D" for hidden files, I didn't tested with them
totally.
The OS haven't a command for this, that's why when you
right-click/properties a folder, you can see that in this moment the disk
reads a
Does this walk the folder tree and pull the sizes from en-US, etc, SEP, and
on and on... totaling all of the sizes combined?
I am guessing that there is no api that does this in Win7 at least. From
the explorer I click for Properties of a BIG folder and it takes a few secs
to total up all the con
Another solution pure VFP here:
? get_DirSize("c:\Windows\System32\drivers")
PROCEDURE get_DirSize
LPARAMETERS tcDir
EXTERNAL ARRAY taFiles
LOCAL laFiles(1), I, lnFiles
IF VARTYPE(pnDirSize) <> "N"
PRIVATE pnDirSize
pnDirSize = 0
ENDIF
tcDir= ADDBS(t
You can also use filer.dll like this:
LOCAL oFiler As CFileUtil OF Filer.FileUtil
LOCAL i, n, c, o
CREATE CURSOR files (fullname V(50), attrib I, bytes I)
oFiler = NEWOBJECT("Filer.FileUtil")
oFiler.SearchPath = GETDIR()
IF EMPTY(oFiler.SearchPath)
RETURN
ENDIF
oFiler.SubFolder = 1
oFiler.FileExpr
Joe,
A couple of observations...
POP3 is a communications protocol for transferring email messages
between server and client (and vice versa). The other protocols being
IMAP and Exchange among others.
I suspect the emails are in what I call EML format which is technically
MIME RFC 822 which
I have a situation where an old Email client is being retired. That client
stored email in folder structures. Each Email is a separate file which I
believe remains in the POP3 format in which it was downloaded. The goal is
to treat the Email as a company resource that can be accessed by anyone w
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