Suggestions for keeping track of my own postings?
Has anybody come up with any brilliant ideas for keeping track of one's own postings? I'd love to follow up on my own, see what's been said after me. That's both in these forums and in the groups I belong to.
I'd like it to be something short of actually keeping written records. That would seem a bit silly.
Has anybody come up with any brilliant ideas for keeping track of one's own postings? I'd love to follow up on my own, see what's been said after me. That's both in these forums and in the groups I belong to. I'd like it to be something short of actually keeping written records. That would seem a bit silly.
Just used this system to find this url in an instant.
Wish I'd started it years ago, and wish I could remember
to use it every time I reply to a post too :)
https://www.truenudists.com/forum/viewthread.php?id=444&page=6
Hmm! I'll have to read that when I have an hour or two.
It sounds, though, like it involves keeping a file in your own 'puter--not an option for me. There's ONE computer in the world where I both can get on this site, and don't have to worry about who's looking around after I'm done. And I get to that computer maybe once a month. There's Kinko's, of course, but I think they block this site).
Hmm! I'll have to read that when I have an hour or two. It sounds, though, like it involves keeping a file in your own 'puter--not an option for me. There's ONE computer in the world where I both can get on this site, and don't have to worry about who's looking around after I'm done. And I get to that computer maybe once a month. There's Kinko's, of course, but I think they block this site).
Saving your comment urls to blog on your profile is the best you can do then
One advisory: before removing the drive, turn it off first using the icon in the system tray (lower right by the clock). If you just unplug it, it could corrupt the file table or the files on the drive and crash the computer.
Note that this is a windows flaw, not anything inherent in either the drive, or the machine. The files MUST be closed, else they can't ( easily) be reopened.
Windows doesn't do this with any predictability, which is one reason why Windows is not appropriate for critical systems. It's also a relatively new shortcoming. Windows didn't have this flaw with floppies, or CDs, or even USB originally.