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Frequently Asked Questions
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Email us with your questions, and
we'll add them here, along with the answers.
Q: I have
more than one email account. How do I set up my email program so that it checks
ALL of my email?
A: If you
are using Microsoft Outlook Express, it's really simple:
- Open
Outlook Express
- Up
at the top, in the toolbar, click on "Tools"
- In
the menu that drops down, click on "Accounts"
- The
top button on the right is "Add" -- click it, and then click "Mail" in the
popup menu
- Follow the step-by-step instructions to insert the account name and
email address
- In
the next section on "Email Server Names", the top box should say "POP3" and the
boxes at the bottom should each say "mail.wmonline.com"
- In
the next section, type in your username and password
- In
the next section, give your new account a friendly name
- In
the next section, indicate how you want the email program to connect to the
server (usually, this is done with a phone line and modem)
- In
the next section, indicate if you wish to use an existing dialup connection or
make a new one.
- You're all done -- click "Finish"
You
don't need to do anything else. The next time you check email, your new account
will automatically be checked along with your original account
listing.
Q: I don't
want to be online while I'm answering my email. How do I get off-line without
closing my email program?
A: There are
two ways to do this. If you are using Outlook Express, click "File" and then
"Disconnect" in the pop-down menu. Or you can look for the little modem icon
down in the lower right corner of your screen, next to the clock --
double-click on it to bring up the modem monitor dialog box (it tells how long
you've been online, how many bytes have been transfered, etc.), and click the
button labeled "Disconnect".
Q: What is a
"webpage"? How big is it?
A: First of
all, you must unlearn everything you ever thought you knew about "pages",
because these pages aren't contained in a physical medium, such as paper.
Think, instead, in terms of "subjects". Very often, if you send a webpage from
your browser to your printer, you will find that it prints out in several
physical pages. Some webpage files are quite large and others quite small. How
large a webpage is depends on how much information is presented on any given
subject, but the electronic medium is not limited by physical dimensions.
If the
author decides that the page has become to big, he/she may decide to build
other pages out of subjects contained within the main heading, ultimately
reducing the "size" of the original page. Loading time (how long it takes a
page to come up in your browser) is a consideration when an author writes pages
that will contain a lot of information and/or graphics (images, pictures, etc.)
and other special features.
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