| | Here's to a summery week!
Heinz | | How to Import EML Files in Postbox In the mornings, Arnold Schönberg did not compose. He made peanut butter and jelly sandwiches instead, and cut them for the kids' lunchboxes. He did not cut them, mind you, in any old manner. The children arrived at school with sandwiches carved in the shapes, if it's true, of animals. Now, if you can get your emails cut in the shape of EML files (which are but the message's full source with an .eml extension), they should fit nicely into Postbox: Do you have an EML file saved to a folder on your computer, say from another email program or web-based email service? You can import that .eml message into a folder in Postbox easily. | How to Set Up Chat Accounts in Mozilla Thunderbird The electric telegraph's cable is "for finding the way home," the English told curious Tibetans (when, in an excursion urged by Lord Curzon, British troops invaded the area for about half a year in 1904 to establish diplomatic relations). Now, whether you're home or on an excursion, Mozilla Thunderbird can lay an electric telegraph table of sorts to many an online chat so you can, for instance, satisfy your curiosity: Whether your friends prefer Facebook Chat or Google Talk (or either); whether your favored chat rooms are on XMPP (or both): you can set up Mozilla Thunderbird to connect to all these chat services and protocols (and Twitter, too). | How to See What Mac OS X Mail is Doing in the Background It's not all water. The largest part, actually, by far is nothing but cold air. Behind the scenes at snow that has just fallen, the ice crystals hold amongst themselves much air — more than 90 percent (of the snow's volume, I gather). Like it does in a down jacket, the air insulates well, and plants, say, stay warm in winter beneath a snowy blanket. Now, if you want to peek behind the scenes at OS X Mail, the blanket is lifted easily a bit: See what Mac OS X Mail is doing when it thinks you're not looking. | From the Archives: Garden Gate - Free Email Stationery "Garden" comes to us from Latin. "What?" I hear you think: "Was the ancient Roman's garden not a hortus?" It was. "Hortus" may even share an etymological root with "garden". The hortus became a garden, though, only when enclosed: "gardinus". A piece of wilderness guarded from the wilderness, the peristylium was, for example, a place to cultivate roses and herbs. Of course, you need a way to get into and out of your beautifully fenced garden — a classy gate: ›› Say "think of me" at the beautiful garden gate. (Outlook, Outlook Express) | | | | Related Searches | | | | Featured Articles | | | | | | Sign up for more free newsletters on your favorite topics | | | | You are receiving this newsletter because you subscribed to the About.com Email newsletter. If you wish to change your email address or unsubscribe, please click here. About.com respects your privacy: Our Privacy Policy Contact Information: 1500 Broadway, 6th Floor New York, NY, 10036 © 2013 About.com | | | | Must Reads | | | Follow me on: | | | | Advertisement | |
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