Mozilla punishes me for setting plain text as my default mail format. I just installed the latest Mozilla hoping it would fix this, and it didn't. If you set the preference to compose e-mail in plain text, you have to reconfigure to compose that occasional HTML message. This is because they take away the Options > Format menu choice, which under that circumstance should offer HTML as an option at the single-message level -- an option I should be able to set as an exception since normally I use plain text. The auto-detect feature is cool, but I don't want to create an HTML message just by mistakenly hitting Ctrl-B or something. There should be a mode in which HTML is available at any time, but with the "safety" firmly engaged until I release it. I use Outlook all day at work, with plain text as my default. I tend even to switch to plain text when replying to rich text messages, but Outlook gives me the option of switching *either* way. It gags me to say Outlook is better than Mozilla in any respect, but well, there you go. The flaw here is that Mozilla interprets turning off the HTML default as "Deny any knowledge of HTML until I reconfigure". They should have that, but as a separate option. I think there is some sort of geeky monastic hair-shirt schtick in play here: we are smart enough to implement rich text, yet strong enough to never use it. ;-) Vic --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss