On Sun, 19 Nov 2006 22:10:19 +0100, Magda wrote:
>On 19 Nov 2006 13:02:58 -0800, in rec.travel.europe, jeremyrh.geo@yahoo.com arranged some
>electrons, so they looked like this:
>
> ...
> ... Magda wrote:
> ... > On 19 Nov 2006 12:46:13 -0800, in rec.travel.europe, jeremyrh.geo@yahoo.com arranged some
> ... > electrons, so they looked like this:
> ... > ...
> ... > ... Magda wrote:
> ... > ...
> ... > ... > Matter of taste, I suppose. Margins R & L 2.5 cm, Tahoma 12... Good enough for me.
> ... > ...
> ... > ... Indeed - I'm just pointing out that the evidence is that most peoples'
> ... > ... taste does not match yours, which may help you in designing documents.
> ... > ... Of course, you may choose not to heed my advice. I think Dorothy Parker
> ... > ... had something to say in similar circumstances.
> ... > ...
> ... > ... As an example - the first printed book that comes to hand is To Kill A
> ... > ... Mockingbird - found in the local bookstore's "crime" section. The lines
> ... > ... are around 60 chars long.
> ... >
> ... > As fun as reading a copy of the Reader's Digest...
> ...
> ... Like anyone cares what your opinion of it is !!
>
>I didn't mean "The Mockingbird", but 60 chars per line - it's like watching a tennis
>match.
Shorter lines make it easier to speed read though.
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DFM - http://www.deepfriedmars.com
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