3/02/2012

[apple-iphone] Digest Number 2918

Messages In This Digest (21 Messages)

Messages

1a.

Card Cert app

Posted by: "Allan Aunkst" aaunkst@gmail.com   tama.drummer62

Thu Mar 1, 2012 5:31 am (PST)



I am looking for an app that you can scan any of your certification cards. I have many cards that are not business cards but are certifications or member organization cards. I was wondering if there's an app that can scan those?

Thanks

1b.

Re: Card Cert app

Posted by: "Vishal Sheth" vusheth@gmail.com   vusheth

Thu Mar 1, 2012 5:34 am (PST)



I guess any photo scanner should do the job. You can save it as pdf.

Vishal Sheth
On Mar 1, 2012 7:01 PM, "Allan Aunkst" <aaunkst@gmail.com> wrote:

> **
>
>
> I am looking for an app that you can scan any of your certification cards.
> I have many cards that are not business cards but are certifications or
> member organization cards. I was wondering if there's an app that can scan
> those?
>
> Thanks
>
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

1c.

Re: Card Cert app

Posted by: "Brent" flapdoodle@gmail.com   flapdoodle44

Thu Mar 1, 2012 5:37 am (PST)



I use several card scanner apps. Some will upload to Dropbox or Evernote.

On Thu, Mar 1, 2012 at 7:32 AM, Vishal Sheth <vusheth@gmail.com> wrote:

> **
>
>
> I guess any photo scanner should do the job. You can save it as pdf.
>
> Vishal Sheth
> On Mar 1, 2012 7:01 PM, "Allan Aunkst" <aaunkst@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > **
>
> >
> >
> > I am looking for an app that you can scan any of your certification
> cards.
> > I have many cards that are not business cards but are certifications or
> > member organization cards. I was wondering if there's an app that can
> scan
> > those?
> >
> > Thanks
> >
> >
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

1d.

Re: Card Cert app

Posted by: "Ingrid Harrington" ingridharrington@me.com   ijhtbo

Thu Mar 1, 2012 7:23 am (PST)



Do you mean loyalty type cards, like to Staples & the like? Take a look at CardStar. Works like a charm & you can toss all those cards.

Sent from Ingrid's iPad 📶

On Mar 1, 2012, at 5:25 AM, Allan Aunkst <aaunkst@gmail.com> wrote:

> I am looking for an app that you can scan any of your certification cards. I have many cards that are not business cards but are certifications or member organization cards. I was wondering if there's an app that can scan those?
>
> Thanks
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

1e.

Re: Card Cert app

Posted by: "UnityHappens" unityhappens@gmail.com   whirlagig

Thu Mar 1, 2012 7:23 am (PST)

1f.

Re: Card Cert app

Posted by: "UnityHappens" unityhappens@gmail.com   whirlagig

Thu Mar 1, 2012 8:00 am (PST)



Key Ring

http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/key-ring-reward-cards/<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/key-ring-reward-cards/id372547556?mt=8>
id372547556?mt=8<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/key-ring-reward-cards/id372547556?mt=8>

Yes, that means all the loyalty/rewards cards that you carry around with
you....
I use it with Ace, AutoZone, Big Lots, Borders, CVS, DSW, Kroger, Office
Depot, Rite Aid and others....

I use it with my iPhone. I don't know about the iPad.

Linda
unityhappens@gmail.com

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

1g.

Re: Card Cert app

Posted by: "Allan Aunkst" aaunkst@gmail.com   tama.drummer62

Thu Mar 1, 2012 8:15 am (PST)



i want it for medical certification cards..cpr,acls.pals,I have alot of
cards like that with exp dates..

Allan

On Thu, Mar 1, 2012 at 10:55, UnityHappens <unityhappens@gmail.com> wrote:

> **
>
>
> Key Ring
>
> http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/key-ring-reward-cards/<
> http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/key-ring-reward-cards/id372547556?mt=8>
> id372547556?mt=8<
> http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/key-ring-reward-cards/id372547556?mt=8>
>
> Yes, that means all the loyalty/rewards cards that you carry around with
> you....
> I use it with Ace, AutoZone, Big Lots, Borders, CVS, DSW, Kroger, Office
> Depot, Rite Aid and others....
>
> I use it with my iPhone. I don't know about the iPad.
>
> Linda
> unityhappens@gmail.com
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>

--
This email was *no*t sent by a mobile device
*Allan Aunkst*

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

1h.

Re: Card Cert app

Posted by: "Pabitra Saha" pksaha000@yahoo.co.uk   pksaha000

Thu Mar 1, 2012 10:53 am (PST)



Use Vue scan.
It is free app in AppStore

On 1 Mar 2012, at 14:36, Brent <flapdoodle@gmail.com> wrote:

> I use several card scanner apps. Some will upload to Dropbox or Evernote.
>
> On Thu, Mar 1, 2012 at 7:32 AM, Vishal Sheth <vusheth@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> **
>> I guess any photo scanner should do the job. You can save it as pdf.
>>
>> Vishal Sheth
>> On Mar 1, 2012 7:01 PM, "Allan Aunkst" <aaunkst@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> **
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I am looking for an app that you can scan any of your certification
>> cards.
>>> I have many cards that are not business cards but are certifications or
>>> member organization cards. I was wondering if there's an app that can
>> scan
>>> those?

1i.

Re: Card Cert app

Posted by: "Allan Aunkst" aaunkst@gmail.com   tama.drummer62

Thu Mar 1, 2012 2:10 pm (PST)



vue scan needs a home scanner ...correct?

On Thu, Mar 1, 2012 at 13:49, Pabitra Saha <pksaha000@yahoo.co.uk> wrote:

> **
>
>
> Use Vue scan.
> It is free app in AppStore
>
> On 1 Mar 2012, at 14:36, Brent <flapdoodle@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > I use several card scanner apps. Some will upload to Dropbox or Evernote.
> >
> > On Thu, Mar 1, 2012 at 7:32 AM, Vishal Sheth <vusheth@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> >> **
> >> I guess any photo scanner should do the job. You can save it as pdf.
> >>
> >> Vishal Sheth
> >> On Mar 1, 2012 7:01 PM, "Allan Aunkst" <aaunkst@gmail.com> wrote:
> >>
> >>> **
> >>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> I am looking for an app that you can scan any of your certification
> >> cards.
> >>> I have many cards that are not business cards but are certifications or
> >>> member organization cards. I was wondering if there's an app that can
> >> scan
> >>> those?
>
>

--
This email was *no*t sent by a mobile device
*Allan Aunkst*

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

2.

Sprint reveals it spent $15.5 billion to fuel its iPhone hunger

Posted by: "Bill Boulware" bill.boulware@gmail.com   boulware0224

Thu Mar 1, 2012 5:44 am (PST)



http://www.engadget.com/2012/02/28/sprint-iphone/

Sent to you by Bill Boulware via Google Reader: Sprint reveals it spent
$15.5 billion to fuel its iPhone hunger via Engadget by Daniel Cooper
on 2/28/12
Sprint's SEC filings have revealed that the carrier has committed to
purchasing $15.5 billion worth of iPhones as part of the long-promised
$20 billion gamble. If each handset costs around $630 at trade, then
we're talking about the network holding nearly 24 million units. Given
that the company most recently ate a loss of $1.3 billion, most of
which was caused by carrier subsidies for the 4S, there's a genuine
fear that the company won't be able to make enough back on each
customer to offset the initial outlay. Given the Baller-style
purchasing decisions of Dan Hesse of late, we'll be watching how this
unfolds with great interest and our fingers very firmly crossed.
Sprint reveals it spent $15.5 billion to fuel its iPhone hunger

3.

Readability lands on iOS devices

Posted by: "Bill Boulware" bill.boulware@gmail.com   boulware0224

Thu Mar 1, 2012 5:51 am (PST)



http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/9To5Mac-MacAllDay/~3/fuSiMhKuZPo/

Sent to you by Bill Boulware via Google Reader: Readability lands on
iOS devices via 9to5Mac by Christian Zibreg on 3/1/12



After a long wait and several setbacks, the free Readability app has
finally landed on iOS devices. A universal binary, Readability supports
both your iPhone/iPod touch and has a native iPad interface. According
to a blog post announcing the software, the app was born from a
collaboration between the Readability team and the talented designers
and builders at Teehan+Lax.

Featuring clean typography from Hoefler & Frere-Jones, the app turns
any web page into a clean view for reading now or later on your iOS
devices or desktop, using the free Readability browser add-on. Articles
seamlessly sync between platforms via an unlimited, searchable archive
on the web.

A paid subscription is still available to those wishing to access
beyond the most recent articles in their Reading Lis, including the
ability to access daily digest of the Reading List on the Amazon
Kindle. Early reviews by The Verge and MacStories are positive and it
looks like Instapaper maker Marco Arment should be worried, indeed.

Readability for iOS is a free download from the App Store. Your image
gallery and release notes are below.



Readability is supported across dozens of popular desktop and mobile
apps through the official API, including Reeder for iOS and Mac,
Twitter clients Echofon, Ubersoscial and Tweetbot and many more. The
company is sharing 70 percent of the proceeds from paid accounts with
publishers of the articles accessed via the service. Readability can
also be accessed on Amazon's Kindle, as an HTML5 web app on mobile
devices at readability.com, through a browser extension and in a number
of third-party apps across platforms that featurebuilt-in Readability
support.
Readability for iOS version 1.0.1
Readability turns any web page into a clean view for reading now or
later on your computer, iPhone or iPad. With the Readability app, you
can catch up reading what you've saved with the free Readability add-on
for your web browser.

To start saving articles from the web to Readability, visit
www.readability.com using your favorite browser and install the free
Readability add-on.

TURNS ANY WEB PAGE INTO A CLEAN, COMFORTABLE READING VIEW
Readability automatically turns web pages into a clean, elegant,
single-column reading view. With beautiful typography provided by
Hoefler & Frere-Jones, the reading experience in Readability is
second-to-none.

READ ON YOUR TERMS – ANYTIME, ANYWHERE.
Too busy to read while on your web browser? Save any web page to
Readability and it will be automatically saved on your web browser,
iPhone or iPad. Once synced, your articles will be there for you –
whether you're online or offline.

A READING EXPERIENCE SECOND TO NONE.
Readability is all about making it easy for you to enjoy reading. You
can customize the reading view by adjusting type size, contrast and
margins to your liking.

SHARE WHAT YOU'RE READING.
Readability provides built-in native sharing support. You can post a
favorite article along with your own comments on Facebook, Twitter or
by email to your friends.

MANAGE YOUR ARTICLES WITH UNLIMITED STORAGE.
Users of Readability enjoy an unlimited, searchable archive that syncs
on the web. As soon as you're done reading an article, simply tap it to
archive.
Click to view slideshow. Related articles
- Readability for Android 'coming very soon' (9to5google.com)
- Vimeo iOS app updated with iPad support: Full-screen playback, video
editor (9to5mac.com)
- NYTimes: Apple Loophole Gives Developers Access to Photos
(9to5mac.com)




Things you can do from here:
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favorite sites

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

4.

Exchange 2007 and Outlook 2010 rescheduled meetings disappear from i

Posted by: "Betsy Schwartz" betsys@gmail.com   betsys99

Thu Mar 1, 2012 9:18 am (PST)



When I reschedule a meeting in Outlook 2010 and Exchange 2007, it
disappears from my iPhone
is anyone else seeing this? I haven't pinned down which types of meetings
are affected.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

5.

Verification Failures

Posted by: "UnityHappens" unityhappens@gmail.com   whirlagig

Thu Mar 1, 2012 9:41 am (PST)



Hi,

I'm so frustrated that the iPhone/iCloud isn't simple to set up and work
for me.
I've had verification failure.

So, I'll back up and tell you a bit.

I've had an Apple ID for a long time.
I've never done a iCloud upload for my iPhone, a 4S a few months old.
I tried setting up iCloud and it asked me to set up an iCloud ID, which I
did.
Now I'm not sure whether this is the same as the Apple ID, that is I don't
know whether my Apple ID has been overridden by the iCloud ID.

I put in the iCloud password to do the iCloud upload and it keeps failing.

I think this has nothing to do with iTunes.
I don't know which password effects what.
I have both passwords, just don't know what the proper way is to make this
work.
I'm not sure what is failing with the verification failure.

I'm really not sure what to do without more frustration.

If I understood what's happening, maybe I can make it work.

Thanks!

Linda

6a.

AT&T changes its throttling techniques: 3GB for HSPA+ (iPhone) or 5G

Posted by: "Bill Boulware" bill.boulware@gmail.com   boulware0224

Thu Mar 1, 2012 9:55 am (PST)



http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/9To5Mac-MacAllDay/~3/TYYICr79PDw/

Sent to you by Bill Boulware via Google Reader: AT&T changes its
throttling techniques: 3GB for HSPA+ (iPhone) or 5GB for LTE gets you
on the naughty list via 9to5Mac by Seth Weintraub on 3/1/12

.

AT&T is now getting ahold of their throttling plans by laying out the
numbers which will get users put into the "reduced data scenario".
Instead of the sliding scale "top 5% of users" which often was people
under 2GB, they now have a hard maximum of 3GB for HSPA users like
those with iPhones and 5GB for their new LTE offerings. Users will
receive a warning the first time but won't get a notice thereafter.

Additionally, we've heard that the actual throttling is a lot less
severe as pointed out by some Howard Forums users.

The move follows outcry from customers and even some customer lawsuit
victories.

There is a new site and FAQ for those interested.

AT&T statement follows:


With mobile data usage continuing to skyrocket and the availability of
spectrum scarce, AT&T, like other wireless companies, manages its
network in the most fair way possible so that we can provide the best
possible mobile broadband experience for all our customers.

How we're managing the network only affects a small minority of the
heaviest smartphone data users still on unlimited plans. Put another
way, this does not impact more than 95 percent of our smartphone
customers.

.

Our unlimited plan customers have told us they want more clarity around
how the program works and what they can expect. Here's what customers
need to know:

.

· Customers with a 3G or 4G smartphone – who also still have our
unlimited data plan – will see speeds reduced if they use 3GB
(gigabytes) of data or more in a billing cycle. Speeds will return to
normal at the start of the next billing cycle. For context, less than 5
percent of smartphone customers use more than 3GB per month.
· For customers with a 4G LTE smartphone – who also still have our
unlimited data plan – data speeds will be reduced if usage is 5GB
(gigabytes) or more in a billing cycle. Speeds will return to normal at
the start of the next billing cycle.

Customers will get a text message from us before experiencing a change
in speed.

Even with reduced data speeds, these customers will still be able to
email and surf the web, and continue to use an unlimited amount of data
each month.

Not impacted by this program, launched last year, are customers on our
tiered data plans.

The reason reduced speeds only apply to unlimited smartphone customers
is because their data usage is significantly higher than those on
tiered plans. For example, in January, the top 5 percent of our
unlimited data plan customers used an average of over 50 percent more
data than the top 5 percent of customers on tiered plans.

Because spectrum is limited and data usage continues to soar, we manage
our network this way to be as fair as possible and so we can provide
the best possible mobile broadband experience to everyone.

We encourage all of our customers to use Wi-Fi whenever possible –
especially when watching video, which is the most data-intensive
activity.

That's because data activity over Wi-Fi does not count against the
threshold for unlimited customers that triggers reduced data speeds or
against customers' tiered data plans. Customers can find out more at
www.att.com/datainfo





Things you can do from here:
- Subscribe to 9to5Mac using Google Reader
- Get started using Google Reader to easily keep up with all your
favorite sites

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

6b.

Re: AT&T changes its throttling techniques: 3GB for HSPA+ (iPhone) o

Posted by: "Brent" flapdoodle@gmail.com   flapdoodle44

Thu Mar 1, 2012 11:32 am (PST)



I am so glad to see AT&T lay out the rules in plain English. The top 5% was
very ambiguous and could change from month to month.

On Thu, Mar 1, 2012 at 11:48 AM, Bill Boulware <bill.boulware@gmail.com>wrote:

> **
>
>
> http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/9To5Mac-MacAllDay/~3/TYYICr79PDw/
>
> Sent to you by Bill Boulware via Google Reader: AT&T changes its
> throttling techniques: 3GB for HSPA+ (iPhone) or 5GB for LTE gets you
> on the naughty list via 9to5Mac by Seth Weintraub on 3/1/12
>
> .
>
> AT&T is now getting ahold of their throttling plans by laying out the
> numbers which will get users put into the �reduced data scenario�.
> Instead of the sliding scale �top 5% of users� which often was people
> under 2GB, they now have a hard maximum of 3GB for HSPA users like
> those with iPhones and 5GB for their new LTE offerings. Users will
> receive a warning the first time but won�t get a notice thereafter.
>
> Additionally, we�ve heard that the actual throttling is a lot less
> severe as pointed out by some Howard Forums users.
>
> The move follows outcry from customers and even some customer lawsuit
> victories.
>
> There is a new site and FAQ for those interested.
>
> AT&T statement follows:
>
>
> With mobile data usage continuing to skyrocket and the availability of
> spectrum scarce, AT&T, like other wireless companies, manages its
> network in the most fair way possible so that we can provide the best
> possible mobile broadband experience for all our customers.
>
> How we�re managing the network only affects a small minority of the
> heaviest smartphone data users still on unlimited plans. Put another
> way, this does not impact more than 95 percent of our smartphone
> customers.
>
> .
>
> Our unlimited plan customers have told us they want more clarity around
> how the program works and what they can expect. Here�s what customers
> need to know:
>
> .
>
> � Customers with a 3G or 4G smartphone � who also still have our
> unlimited data plan � will see speeds reduced if they use 3GB
> (gigabytes) of data or more in a billing cycle. Speeds will return to
> normal at the start of the next billing cycle. For context, less than 5
> percent of smartphone customers use more than 3GB per month.
> � For customers with a 4G LTE smartphone � who also still have our
> unlimited data plan � data speeds will be reduced if usage is 5GB
> (gigabytes) or more in a billing cycle. Speeds will return to normal at
> the start of the next billing cycle.
>
> Customers will get a text message from us before experiencing a change
> in speed.
>
> Even with reduced data speeds, these customers will still be able to
> email and surf the web, and continue to use an unlimited amount of data
> each month.
>
> Not impacted by this program, launched last year, are customers on our
> tiered data plans.
>
> The reason reduced speeds only apply to unlimited smartphone customers
> is because their data usage is significantly higher than those on
> tiered plans. For example, in January, the top 5 percent of our
> unlimited data plan customers used an average of over 50 percent more
> data than the top 5 percent of customers on tiered plans.
>
> Because spectrum is limited and data usage continues to soar, we manage
> our network this way to be as fair as possible and so we can provide
> the best possible mobile broadband experience to everyone.
>
> We encourage all of our customers to use Wi-Fi whenever possible �
> especially when watching video, which is the most data-intensive
> activity.
>
> That�s because data activity over Wi-Fi does not count against the
> threshold for unlimited customers that triggers reduced data speeds or
> against customers� tiered data plans. Customers can find out more at
> www.att.com/datainfo
>
>
>
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

6c.

Re: AT&T changes its throttling techniques: 3GB for HSPA+ (iPhone) o

Posted by: "AnneL" shadow484@comcast.net   alogston

Thu Mar 1, 2012 12:10 pm (PST)



> I am so glad to see AT&T lay out the rules in plain English. The top 5%
> was
> very ambiguous and could change from month to month.

It's better that they have a threshold that at least users can understand,
but it's still going to get them in trouble both in court and in the market.
As the article states, they're still imposing an artificial limitation
that's applied disparately with the other users. They're going to end up in
court while the court decides whether that still constitutes "unlimited."
In the market, other carriers like Verizon are going to be able to smile
virtuously and say, "Hey, we only throttle top users when there's actual
congestion in their particular area, and then they go back to normal
speeds," which is believable network management, while AT&T chooses to use
throttling as punishment instead, by throttling for the rest of the billing
period, regardless of congestion. So for the exact same amount of data
used, you could end up being throttled for weeks on AT&T versus a few hours,
or even not at all, depending on when and where you have your heaviest data
usage, on Verizon.

Anne

7.

AT&T Officially Makes Unlimited Data Plans Not So Unlimited With New

Posted by: "Bill Boulware" bill.boulware@gmail.com   boulware0224

Thu Mar 1, 2012 10:13 am (PST)



http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/H7uKa0Q4Qt8/

Sent to you by Bill Boulware via Google Reader: AT&T Officially Makes
Unlimited Data Plans Not So Unlimited With New Throttling Rules via
TechCrunch by Matt Burns on 3/1/12

Welcome to the brave new world, everyone. AT&T announced today new
guidelines in regards to older so-called unlimited data plans.
Subscribers will still be able to keep these plans but they're
essentially limited to AT&T's new 3GB/5GB data plans.

Let's be clear: AT&T's unlimited plans are now officially limited.

AT&T, like most other wireless carriers, started selling unlimited data
plans several years ago to curb anxiety in regards to data usage. At
that time, mobile data was still limited to email, web browsing and the
photo messaging. Streaming media was still very rare. These unlimited
plans offered carriers' marketers and salesmen an easy tool to get
people to upgrade to smartphones. But now they're supposedly killing
the network — or so carriers would have consumers believe.

Today's change essentially caps these legacy data plans at 3GB for
HSPA+ and 5GB for LTE. Any overage will result in throttling, which as
anyone who has been throttled before will attest, essentially kills
data connectivity. Even mundane tasks as browsing the internet are
painfully slow. This cap remains in place until the end of the billing
cycle. You will still have unlimited data, but on AT&T's terms.

AT&T started throttling customers in 2011 in response to increased data
usage. However, it was always somewhat shrouded in mystery. The policy
was public, which caused misconceptions and confusion. The caps were
also set at 2GB even after AT&T rolled out new, $30 3GB data plan. This
new move by AT&T, while shaddy at best and a breach of contract at
worst, at least puts the company's policy in clear view. It even gives
tips on how to better manage data.

However, as I stated previously, throttling those on legacy products
affects those nearing their end of their AT&T contracts. AT&T should be
courting these people rather than driving them towards other carriers.





Things you can do from here:
- Subscribe to TechCrunch using Google Reader
- Get started using Google Reader to easily keep up with all your
favorite sites

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

8.

Playlists

Posted by: "Allan" aaunkst@gmail.com   tama.drummer62

Thu Mar 1, 2012 11:15 am (PST)



Any reason you're playlists would show up on your iPhone at home but when you leave the home with your iPhone the playlists disappear.
I'm assuming this had to do something with home sharing.

Email sent by iphone 4

9a.

Kind of off topic

Posted by: "Allan" aaunkst@gmail.com   tama.drummer62

Thu Mar 1, 2012 3:45 pm (PST)



I use iDisk on my iPhone and it's on my home Mac. Should I be looking to move those documents? Heard they are doing away with that in June?

Email sent by iphone 4

9b.

Re: Kind of off topic

Posted by: "Jim Saklad" jimdoc@me.com   jimdoc01

Thu Mar 1, 2012 4:51 pm (PST)



> I use iDisk on my iPhone and it's on my home Mac.
> Should I be looking to move those documents?

Yes.

> Heard they are doing away with that in June?

Yes.

--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jim Saklad mailto:jimdoc@me.com

9c.

Re: Kind of off topic

Posted by: "Allan" aaunkst@gmail.com   tama.drummer62

Thu Mar 1, 2012 5:07 pm (PST)



Ok thanks

Email sent by iphone 4 👀

On Mar 1, 2012, at 19:15, Jim Saklad <jimdoc@me.com> wrote:

> > I use iDisk on my iPhone and it's on my home Mac.
> > Should I be looking to move those documents?
>
> Yes.
>
> > Heard they are doing away with that in June?
>
> Yes.
>
> --
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Jim Saklad mailto:jimdoc@me.com
>
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

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