![]() ![]() How you would do that depends on what youre using. Once “Turn off highlighting” is selected, however, at least things become what I’d hope:Īnd now you know. 2 5 You could set up a rule in your email account that sends anything with the subject heading straight to the bin. Maybe that’s logical to you, but every time I want to find that feature, I look and look before I remember where it is. ![]() Turns out that it’s on the “More” menu at the very top of the screen: The logical place (to me) for the remove highlight option to be located is on the menu hidden under the “reply” arrow on the top right of the message. I’ll click on one and you can see the highlighting, whether it’s in the subject, the body, against a blue background, etc: There are a lot of messages that contain “reset”, no surprise. I’ll search for “reset” in my Gmail account: Okay, enough sniping, right? Let’s get down to it. Then again, it’s Google and while the team’s great at building big scale tools, their user interfaces quite often leave something to be desired. In the Mail app on your Mac, click the arrow next to Flagged in the Mail sidebar or the Favorites bar, then choose a flag. You can turn it off, but it’s not obvious how to do that because, by my way of thinking, it’s been added to the wrong menu. Do a search in Google’s Gmail system and while the summary listing of messages don’t highlight the match, when you’re reading a specific message, the occurrence or occurrences of the matching word, phrase or pattern are displayed with a subtle yellow background highlight. Do a search in Google’s Gmail system and while the summary listing of messages don’t highlight the match, when you’re reading a specific message, the occurrence or occurrences of the matching word, phrase or pattern are displayed with a subtle yellow background highlight. is the new name for Hotmail its a mail service that can be accessed via your browser or added to MS Outlook as a mail account. MS Outlook is included in some versions of MS Office, its a mail program to which you add your mail account. I often take screen captures - as I did for this article - and know exactly what you’re talking about. MS Outlook and Outlook Express are two entirely unconnected mail programs. ![]()
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