E., that is just what I have been thinking, but I didn't know how to say it in the right tone. <smile> Sue S. ----- Original Message ----- From: "E." <thoth93@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: <bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Sunday, July 17, 2005 3:58 PM Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Re: renewing books you're validating But if you do that, it stays on the step 1 page and more than one person could possibly validate it. At 06:04 AM 7/17/2005, you wrote: >you don't really even need to download it again. Just make it think you are. >Example, find the book you were validating and time expired on from the step >one page, click download, which brings you to the next page about the book, >then click the link which says something about download such and such a book >for review. >This brings up the download dialog box. I think I do click the save button, >but then it asks you what you want to save the file as, and all I do is alt >F4 out of the window. Bookshare's website still believes you downloaded it, >and from here you can continue working on your original copy you downloaded >the week before. > >----- Original Message ----- >From: "Mike Pietruk" <pietruk@xxxxxxxxx> >To: <bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> >Sent: Sunday, July 17, 2005 5:40 AM >Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Re: renewing books you're validating > > > > Two other points on renewing: > > > > (1) Renewing takes literally seconds to do on the Step 2 page. It takes > > longer for me to write this point than accomplishing a renewal that hasn't > > yet expired. > > > > (2) If one fails to renew in time, and no one else grabs the book, going > > through step 1 gets you the book again. > > You have to go through the motions of downloading the book again, but > > you don't have to keep that new download as presumably what you are > > working on is more polished. > > > > > > > >