Hi, Given the recent increase in traffic on our list, you may be interested in modifying your subscription preferences to receive messages in DIGEST mode, which means you get all of the messages in a day combined into a single message. Should you wish to change your preferences, here's how: - Go to https://listserv.yorku.ca/archives/shoe.html - Click ''Join or leave the list (or change settings)" - Click 'login with your LISTSERV password' in the first paragraph. - Enter your E-mail Address and password - If you don't know your password, click "get a new LISTSERV password" and create one - Click the "follow this link" link. - Choose your subscription type (which is Regular by default) and other options and click the "Update Options" button. Here are the ways you can choose to receive messages on this list (from LISTSERV's documentation): ***** Regular With a "regular" subscription, you receive individual postings immediately as they are processed by LISTSERV. Digest (Traditional), Digest (MIME format), Digest (HTML format) With a "digest" subscription, you receive larger messages (called "digests") at regular intervals, usually once per day or once per week. These "digests" are collections of individual list postings. Some lists are so active that they produce several digests per day. Digests are a good compromise between reading everything as it is posted and feeling like the list is clogging your mailbox with a multitude of individual postings. There are three digest formats: a "traditional", text-only format; a MIME format, which (with mail clients that understand MIME digests) "bursts" the individual messages out of the digest so that you can read them separately; and an HTML format, which requires an HTML mail clients. Index (Traditional), Index (HTML format) With an "index" subscription, you receive short "index" messages at regular intervals, usually once per day or once per week. These "indexes" show you what is being discussed on the list, without including the text of the individual postings. For each posting, the date, the author's name and address, the subject of the message, and the number of lines is listed. You can then download messages of interest from the server (the index contains instructions on how to do that). An index subscription is ideal if you have a slow connection and only read a few hand-picked messages. The indexes are very short and you do not have to worry about long download times. The drawback of course is that you need to reconnect to retrieve messages of interest from the server. You can choose to have the index sent to you in either a traditional format (plain text) or in HTML format with hyperlinks. ***** If you have problems, please let me know and I will help you. Thanks to Avi Cohen for suggesting that this would be of interest to our subscribers. -- Humberto Barreto www.depauw.edu/learn/microexcel