On Saturday, September 28, 2002, 2:30:06 AM, Dierk Haasis wrote: > As I wrote in another message that is plainly wrong.
No, you are mixing content and the object. > Any written text belongs to its originator regardless of where the > physical evidence is stored. are you claiming you can come to my house, enter and take it back? > You can, for instance, not publish a letter you received without the > prior consent of the sender - as you cannot change the contents he > made up. Unless it is fair usage, perhaps. Changing the content is not the reason I want to be able to edit e-mails, except when I am working with someone else in a collaborative manner, which I often do in my profession and on committees. I want to be able to combine received content and my own thoughts or additions of information. > You can annotate it, but only in a way which shows that the annotated > text is not by you and has not been changed by anyone else but the > author (except he ave you the rights to do so). And that is exactly > what is achieved by TB!'s Memo feature. No, the memo feature does not allow one to annotate. It allows one to link some information in another window. -- Dwight A. Corrin P O Box 47828 Wichita KS 67201-7828 316.263.9706 fax 316.263.6385 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Using The Bat! 1.60i on Windows XP version 5,1 ________________________________________________ Current version is 1.61 | "Using TBUDL" information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html