Actually it does.
Thanks .
I am too soon old, too late smart. After posting this, I did the smart
thing and searched the group, (who woulda thunk of using search in
Google?) and found a workable workaround.
Thanks again. Seems like a good email, but right now I feel like I am
driving a Porsche to go to the corner store for milk and bread.
Doug
Leebehr™
Sep 10, 8:46 pm show options
From: Leebehr™ - Find messages by this author
Date: Sat, 10 Sep 2005 18:46:16 -0700
Local: Sat, Sep 10 2005 8:46 pm
Subject: Re: [Gmail-Help-Discussion] Mailing list
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---------------
*Creating a group of Contacts*
------------------------------

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Compiled with the contribution of Gmail users, thanks for all of them !
*How to build multipurpose contact groups*
1) click with your mouse on CONTACTS, ( blue link, left middle side )
2) choose contacts one by one
3) click on "edit contact information" ( a blue link, below the contact name
)
4) in the NOTES window write in column, "friends", "co-workers", "family"
...one or more in the same window for to do multiple choices, in other
words, any contact can be in multiple groups, and if you reach the limit of
100 addresses allowed for to send, split them as :"family1" and "family2"
"familyX...". and click SAVE
5) when you want to send to any group, in the top middle of the CONTACTS
window you will see SEARCH CONTACTS, write there "friends" or whatever else
and click the search button.
6) in the bottom you will see "all" and "none" , choose "all"
7) in the top of the same CONTACTS window you will see on left top a COMPOSE
button, click on it
8) now you have a COMPOSE window TO with all you chosen contacts, put your
mouse into and click Ctrl+A and CUT it with your mouse
9) chose BCC and paste on it...
*Hints*
1. It doesn't seem to allow an OR function in the search, but you can deal
with that with multiple searches. You do your search, add them, and then
click the "all contacts" tab, and the full list is displayed, with the
selected contacts checked. then just do another search, click the all as
before, click "all contacts" again, and you'll see both sets highlighted.
(And of course along the way you can selectively unhighlight any.)
*In Eudora if I had a person on three different mailing lists and selected
them all, he would be on this list twice (and get two copies of the
email--very annoying to him). This system allows me to put a person on as
many lists as I want, and makes sure he only gets the msg once. *
2. You can also use this multiple searching to simulate a NOT function.
e.g., I have a bunch of people marked friend and several marked journalists.
When I want a message to include only friends who are not journalists, I
just do the friend search first, and click all the mark them. Then I go back
to "all contacts," search on journalists and the list of journalists come
up, with the ones who are also friends highlighted. I click none, and they
are all highlighted. Now when I go back to "all contacts" only the friends
who are not journalists are highlighted.