Thursday June 23, 2011
I looked the other way. It sat down on my apple.
I pretended not to care; took another bite. It flew into my hair.
This wasp really wanted a sip of my breakfast. Gorging an apple down whole is challenging even undisturbed by flying friends, though.
Better to take it step by step, always saving for — maybe just a hair — later:
Be safe and save your Windows Live Hotmail message as a draft so you can continue editing it later.
Wednesday June 22, 2011
Why nine? Millions, I'm sure, wonder each day around 7 a.m.
Snoozing a mere minute more is too little, for certain, too early; half an hour's probably too much to take. Why, though, nine minutes and not, say, ten?
Ten minutes of snoozing, it turns out, was the upper limit when the first alarm clocks with a "snooze" button were concocted. The mechanical snoozing mechanisms were no more precise than the alarm clocks themselves, of course, and the sensible goal was to go for nine minutes of snoozing plus whatever additional dozing inaccuracy allowed.
Now, if you want more precision for your Gmail forwarding, a filter could be the sensible choice; the improved automation could earn you an additional push of the "snooze" button, too, per month:
Want to forward all your Gmail email to multiple addresses, or just special messages to your mobile phone perhaps? Here's how to have Gmail filters forward exactly the mail you want to wherever you can use it best.
Monday June 20, 2011
Big cats eat. Small cats eat.
Still, feeding lets you tell them apart: tiger, lion, jaguar and most other big cats eat lying down; housecat, lynx, ocelot and friends sit or stand to feed.
The cats in this email background stand and sit, of course — ready to gulp:
It's a simple formula: lovely kittens, lovely stationery, lovely emails. (Windows Mail, Windows Live Mail, Outlook, Outlook Express)
Sunday June 19, 2011
I paused, I think, which gave me away.
I had gone to see a soccer match, you see, as a child when, I presume — I don't really recall these things — I presume, I may not exactly have been allowed to do that. Mom welcomed me back home: "The weather wasn't too agreeable in Vienna, was it?"
This is where I paused before saying something like: "Yes, no — how would I know?"
In any event, to ask about something without asking about it, you can always ask about something that strongly correlates with what you're trying to find out. With MobileMe Mail, you can find out directly, though, where it's gone or where it has been:
Is MobileMe Mail down for everyone, for some members or just for you? Find out whether Apple is aware of any issues with MobileMe Mail and other services or whether you should alert them — and look for problems at your end maybe.