Or you can simply find any other file on the internet, when it asks you where you want to save it, look a the folder it is referring you to.
That will be the last place you saved a download to, and likely the place you downloaded your Microsoft file.
Don't get me wrong, I agree with you completely. The masses just don't care enough until it matters, when, as you say, it is too late.
One day people will wake up and look at the world, and say "how the hell did we let this happen".
Unfortunately you're not incredibly unlikely to have any luck without backups. The only thing I can suggest is asking the original recipient (or sender) if they still have it, then staggering your backups so that in future you have the ability to access older files.
True, tfg13, but it's nothing new in the MS (or OS licence) world. The fact is that people simply don't care.
They're not wrong, life's too short if you don't care about computers. It's just a shame that they are in the majority, and majority rule out.
We have some HTC PDA/Phone units and haven't had this problem, but receipts are not exactly reliable. I personally set all of my mail clients to never respond to receipt requests.
We use our air compressor (used for car tyres) on our computers. Gbaughma might be right, and it probably isn't a 'best practice', but we've never had a problem and it's been used hundreds of times.
I use one, two and three. There are occasions when I might not; for example:
I would use the extra comma in the above example, simply because there is an 'and' in the previous item. As far as I am aware, both are acceptable.
Sorry, what I meant was, why would HP only advertise it as an HP-UX card (and limit THEIR potential customer base), if it WAS capable of being used under windows.
I hope it does work for you. As for a driver being written, I really don't have enough experience with them to comment. I don't...
Since HP don't have a windows driver, I'm somewhat doubtful about the Intel driver working (why needlessly limit your client base for a product?). All I can recommend is that you try installing one in a windows machine, with Intel's windows drivers.
I've not seen anything that will do this. Out of curiosity, why is it being done this way?
Would it not be possible for the sender to transfer the file directly using FTP?
This is most likely due to XP SP2's firewall blocking the UDP packets that trigger new mail notifications. Have a look here for the MS solution:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/839226
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