


                          
                             READNOTE V 1.0 
                         Instructions and Notes 

         Welcome to READNOTE V 1.0, a bibliography database template for 
         Microsoft Access that was designed to quickly and accurately store, 
         retrieve, and output your reading notes.  Using on-screen 
         controls, you can: 
             Move through your database; 
             Print the current record or a set of selected records in a 
                variety of ways; 
             Separate book and periodical data for easier text 
                formatting; and
             Create a separate table of selected records for export to your 
                favorite word processor or application. 
      
         As your reading notes database grows, ReadNote builds lists of 
         standard entries for Journal/Periodical Names, Book Publisher 
         information, and standardized keywords that help you enter your 
         reading notes more quickly and accurately.  It also makes searches 
         of your database more accurate. 

         Most importantly, READNOTE'S powerful "Records Filter" form lets 
         you view selected groups of records without ever having to design 
         a query or enter an expression. It includes a pop-up NotePad and 
         ScratchPad. Requires 330k disk space on your hard disk, Microsoft 
         Windows 3.0 or higher, and Microsoft Access Version 1.0. 
  
   
         READNOTE is a shareware product of Greenturtle, Inc., and can be 
         registered from the on-screen order form within READNOTE. 

  INTRODUCTION: 

    Before you begin using ReadNote, there are a few things to remember: 

     1.) Make a blank copy of ReadNote somewhere on your hard disk or on 
         floppy. 

     2.) Installation of ReadNote is simple: Make a blank copy of 
         ReadNote.MDB in the directory where you keep your Access 
         database. It's ready to open from within Access.
     
     3.) There are a number of tables, queries, forms, reports, macros 
         and modules packaged within ReadNote.  DO NOT DELETE, RENAME, or 
         EDIT THE DATA IN ANY OF THESE DATABASE OBJECTS. 
         
     4.) ENJOY!!! 


  A.) OPENING READNOTE 
      The first thing most users want to know is how to open READNOTE.  


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         Here's how -
   
   Open: 
     1.) Open Microsoft Access, and click on its File menu - Open 
         Database command 
     2.) Select READNOTE from the directory where it's stored, and press 
         OK 
     3.) READNOTE's Welcome Screen will appear. At the bottom are 3 
         buttons -click on the Open Master Form button. 
     4.) The Master Form will appear - you're ready to work! 
         
     Note - Almost anything you might want to do with READNOTE can be 
         accessed through the Master Form.  Although experienced Access 
         users will know how to bypass READNOTE's automatic setup 
         procedures, it is unadvisable to do so. 

  B:) ENTERING A NEW RECORD 

         There are two sample records already in ReadNote to give you an 
         idea of how records are stored. You will probably want to enter 
         some new records with READNOTE. We'll give you two examples -- 
         one book and one periodical -- to enter. 
                                                               
  Adding a Journal/Periodical Entry: 
         
         We'll suppose that you want to enter 
         a reading note from the April 1, 1993 issue of Rolling Stone 
         Magazine. The article you are interested in is titled "Left 
         Means, Right Ends" by William Greider.  The article begins on 
         page 28. It is in Rolling Stone Issue 653.  The article is about 
         President Clinton's proposed economic policies, and we're using 
         these four words as keywords for searches:  interest, Clinton, 
         taxes, conservative.  Here is how you enter this reading note: 

     1.) Open ReadNote, and click on the Open Master Form button at the 
         bottom of the Welcome to ReadNote Screen. 

     2.) When the Master Form appears, click on the Open Control Panel 
         button at the top left of the form.  The Control Panel (CP) will 
         open. The CP displays a series of command buttons you can use to 
         do various things within ReadNote.  Find the Add a New Record 
         button in the CP and click on it. 

     3.) The Book/Journal dialog box will appear, which asks whether your 
         reading note comes from a book or journal.  Click on the Journal 
         button. 

     4.) The Book/Journal dialog box disappears, and you will find 
         yourself back at the Master Form.  It is our suggestion that you 
         enter the information in the Master Form as you would like it to 
         appear in a bibliography.  This way, if you export records to a 
         word processor for use in a bibliography, you will have a 
         minimal amount of text formatting and editing to do. 

     5.) With your mouse, click on the field to the right of the Author's 

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         Last Name label. Type in Greider. Use your mouse or tab key to 
         move the cursor to the Author's First Name field.  Type in 
         William. 

     6.) Move to the Journal/Periodical Title field using your tab key or 
         your mouse - type Left Means, Right Ends.  Move to the 
         Journal/Periodical Name combo box, and type Rolling Stone. 
   
     Note: The drop-down lists for the Journal/Periodical Name and the 
         Book Publisher Info boxes get their value from the records you 
         have already created.  If you already have entered a reading 
         note from Rolling Stone, you will notice that upon clicking the 
         arrow at the end of the Journal/Periodical Name box, you can 
         scroll down and select Rolling Stone from the list.  This makes 
         records entry easier, quicker, and more consistent, which makes 
         your searches in the Records Filter more accurate. 

     7.) Move to the Publication Date field, type April 1, 1993.  Move to 
         the Volume field, enter Issue 653. Move to the Page field and 
         type in Page 28. 

     8.) Next, you will be using the Keywords Selector add keywords to 
         your record. Move to the Keyword Selector, and click on arrow of 
         the K-Selector 1 combo box.  You will see a list of  keywords 
         already in use to choose from.  The first keyword is:   
         Interest.  Interest   is in the list, having been used in one of 
         the 2 examples we enclosed in Readnote. Scroll down the list 
         until you find   interest  , and then click on   interest   to 
         highlight it. You have made your first selection.  

         Move to the K-Selector 2 combo box, and click on its arrow to 
         open the list.  The next keyword is   Clinton.  Clinton   is not 
         in your list - this is how to add it:  Scroll to the top of the 
         list and click on **ALL KEYWORDS**.  This will close the K-
         Selector 2 list, and blank its combo box. Then, click on the Add 
         a New Keyword button at the bottom of the Keywords Selector. A 
         bright yellow Add a New Keyword dialog box will appear, along 
         with dialog box that gives you instructions for adding a 
         keyword. Click on OK for the instructions box, and then click on 
         the field in the Add a Keyword dialog box.  Type   Clinton   in 
         the field, and then click on the Update Keywords button.  The 
         Add a Keyword dialog box will close. If you go back to the K-
         Selector 2 combo box and click on its arrow.  Scroll down the list, 
         you will now find Clinton.  Click on Clinton to highlight it. 

         Move to K-Selector 3 and add   taxes   to your list of keywords 
         using the procedure in the paragraph above. Repeat the process 
         in K-Selector 4 to add   conservative  to your list of keywords, 
         once again using the procedure listed above. 

         Once you have made your keyword selections in K-Selectors 1-4 
         (you can have up to 4 for each reading note), click the Set 
         Keywords button to add your selections to the Keywords field to 
         the left.  You can make changes to the keywords using the same 
         process - select the new keywords you want to use for a reading 

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         note, press the Set Keywords button, and your old selections 
         will be replaced by your new selections. 

         Just like the lists for the Journal Names and Book Publisher 
         Info combo boxes (see next example),  the K-Selector combo box 
         lists get their value from selections you have made previously.  
         If the keyword you desire is not on the list, you have never 
         used it previously in your selections. The advantage to this is 
         that you always have a current list of keywords in use, which 
         helps simplify keyword selection and makes your searches more 
         accurate and effective. 

         You can cancel the addition of a new keyword by clicking on the 
         Cancel button in the Add a Keyword dialog box. 

     9.) Move to the Comments field. Type: Interesting article about 
         Clinton's new tax plan. 

         Your new reading note from a Journal/Periodical is now complete. 

   Lets add a reading note from a book - Inside Microsoft Access - by 
         Helen Feddema, Mike Groh, Forrest Houlette, Greg Reddick and 
         Rick Wagner.  It was published by New Riders Publishing, Carmel, 
         IN. in 1993. The reading note we are recording comes from page 
         101. We have chosen these keywords:  Access, Microsoft, 
         database, and Windows. 

         The steps for adding a book are almost exactly the same as 
         adding a journal/periodical entry. 

     1.) Open the Master Form, and click on the Open Control Panel button 
         to open the Control Panel.  Find the Add a New Record button, 
         and click on it. 

     2.) The Book/Journal dialog box will appear - only this time, you 
         will click on the Book button. The Book/Journal dialog box will 
         close, and you will be back at the Master Form. 
         
         You will probably note that it is almost exactly the same, 
         except that, in place of the Journal/Periodical Title and 
         Journal/Periodical Name fields, the Book Title and Book 
         Publisher Info fields will be visible. 

     3.) Move to the Author's Last Name field.  Type in Feddema.  Then 
         move to the Author's First Name Field - and enter    Helen, Mike 
         Groh, Forrest Houlette, Greg Reddick and Rick Wagner.  

         For reading notes with multiple authors, we suggest entering the 
         last name of the principal author in the Author's Last Name 
         field, and the principal author's first name, followed by the 
         rest of the author's names in the Author's First Name field. 

     4.) Move to the Book Title field, and enter Inside Microsoft Access. 
         Then move to the Book Publisher Info combo box, and type in 
         Carmel, IN: New Riders Publishing.  Once again, the Book 

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         Publisher's Info combo box and the Journal Name combo box lists 
         derive their value from the records you have already entered.  
         If you have already entered a reading note from Carmel, IN: New 
         Riders Publishing, that information will already be in the list 
         for the Book Publisher's Info combo box.  Scroll down the list, 
         and click on the entry to highlight it. This saves you time and 
         effort, and makes your searches more effective.  Also note that 
         typing the first letter of the entry in the combo box, and then 
         clicking on the arrow moves you down through the list to all of 
         the entries that start with that letter.  For example, typing C 
         in the Book Publisher's Info combo box, and then clicking on its 
         arrow will show you all of your previously entered Book 
         Publishers from cities that begin with the letter C - Chicago, 
         Cleveland, Cincinnati, etc. 
  
     5.) Then, move to the Publication Date and Page fields to enter the 
         proper information there. 

     6.) Keyword Selection for books is exactly the same as it was 
         explained for journals. Enter these keywords in K-Selectors 1-4:  
         Access, Microsoft, database, and Windows. 

     7.) Move to the comments field - type:  Excellent manual for 
         advanced Microsoft Access users. 
        
         Your reading note example for a book is now complete. 
   
   CLOSE: 
     To close READNOTE: 
     
     Press the Open Control Panel button in the Master Form, and then 
         press the Close Master Form button in the Control Panel. 
     
     The Close Master Form dialog box will appear. It will say "Click on 
         OK to Close Master Form".  
     
     PLEASE CLICK ON OK!! 
     
     You will then be back at the Welcome screen - click on the Close 
         READNOTE button. 
 

  C.) A FEW NOTES ABOUT OTHER MASTER FORM CONTROLS: 

         Across the top of the Master Form you will see a series of control 
         buttons and fields. Starting at the left: 

     1.) Date Entered field - shows the date you entered this reading 
         note.  This field is automatically filled in when you add a new 
         record. 

     2.) Open Control Panel button - opens the control panel.  We'll go 
         into the control panel in more detail in the next section. 

     3.) Arrow buttons - just like the buttons at the bottom of your 

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         Access forms - these move you through the set of records you 
         have selected. 

     4.) # Reading Notes in this Set field - tells you the number of 
         records in the set you have selected.  Note - when you first 
         open ReadNote, this field will tell you that you have 1 reading 
         note in the set. Don't be alarmed - this field is set to 
         recalculate as you move through your records.  This field is 
         very handy for use with the Records Filter, which will be 
         explained in the next section. 

     5.) Select this Reading Note No and Yes buttons - these toggle 
         buttons allow you to "mark" reading notes for later use. 
         Clicking the Yes button "depresses" it, and changes the color of 
         the type Yes to red.  Clicking No raises the Yes button, 
         "depresses" the No button, and changes No to red. You will find 
         this feature very handy when printing or exporting records using 
         the Control Panel. 

  D.) THE RECORDS FILTER 

         The Records Filter allows you to find sets of reading notes 
         easily and quickly without having to go into Access' QBE query 
         design grid or without having to learn the various expressions 
         used in queries.  

         Note: At this point, with four reading notes in your database, 
         the Records Filter probably doesn't seem very important. 
         ReadNote, however, was originally designed to convert an ASCII-
         based text filer database of over 700 reading notes into a 
         format that could be easily used in various applications under 
         Windows. Without the Records Filter, "getting at" those reading 
         notes meant an endless cycle of query design and record 
         selection. Believe us, once you get more than a few reading 
         notes in your database and you have to make some searches, you 
         will begin to understand the power and usefulness of Records 
         Filter. 

         Press the Open Records Filter button in the Control Panel and 
         the Records Filter form appears on the screen. Across the top 
         are these buttons: 

    Reset Search Criteria: Clears the records filter of any previous 
         selection criteria 

    Reset Selects to No:  Sets the values of Select this Reading Note to 
         No for all records 

    OK:  Once you have made your selections, press OK to close the Records 
         Filter and view the set of records you selected. 

    Cancel: Closes the Records Filter form without filtering the records. 

         The idea behind the Records Filter is that you can find a set of 
         records based on the criteria you enter into the fields in the 

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         Records Filter.  You can make the filter as broad or as narrow 
         as you like, depending on what you enter in the fields. Leaving 
         a field blank will not filter any records based on that field. 

         Suppose you want to find the reading note you entered from 
         Inside Microsoft Access by Helen Feddema et al.  This is what 
         you would do: 

         Just below the command buttons, there is a group of alpha-sort 
         buttons, just like those in the PIM application packaged with 
         your copy of Access.  They work the same way.  Pressing the "F" 
         button enters "F" in the last name field.  If you were to press 
         OK now, ReadNote would find the set of reading notes you had 
         entered where the last name of the primary author begins with 
         the letter "F" which includes the reading note you're looking 
         for - Inside Microsoft Access by Helen Feddema et al.  

         This may be all you need at this point, but let's suppose you 
         want to filter the records further. 

         In the Last Name field - you could type Feddema - which would 
         give you all of the reading notes where you have Feddema entered 
         as the Last Name. 

         The field below the Last Name field is Journ/Per Title.  There 
         is one important note to remember about the Records Filter -- 
         
         A BOOK IS NOT A JOURNAL AND A JOURNAL IS NOT A BOOK!  
         
         ReadNote keeps book and journal entries separate. If you have 
         entered your reading notes according to the procedures listed 
         previously, looking for Inside Microsoft Access - which is a 
         book - by entering a filter in either the Journ/Per Title field 
         or in the Journal/Periodical combo box in the Records Filter, 
         will give you an empty set as a result. The same thing will 
         happen if you are looking for a reading note from a journal and 
         you make an entry in the Book Title or Book Publishers fields of 
         the Records Filter. 

      Move to the Book Title Field - you can enter Inside Microsoft 
         Access, Inside, or Microsoft Access. All of these entries will 
         return Inside Microsoft Access by Helen Feddema. The difference 
         is that entering: 

         Inside Microsoft Access  --  gives you any book title that 
           contains the phrase "Inside Microsoft Access"; 
         
         Inside  --  finds all of the book titles that contain the word 
           "Inside"; 
         
         Microsoft Access  --  finds all of the book titles that contains the 
           phrase "Microsoft Access". 
         
         Also note that entering F or Feddema in the last name field, in 
         conjunction with your entry in the Book Title Field further 

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         limits the set of records ReadNote will return. 
         
      The next field you can use to find Inside Microsoft Access by Helen 
         Feddema is the Book Publishers combo box.  Using the combo box, 
         you can select from the list of all the Book Publisher info 
         currently in your database.  By clicking the arrow button on the 
         combo box, you will get that list.  Scroll down to Carmel, IN: 
         New Riders Publishing.   Click on it to select it.  Using this 
         field will give you all of your entries from Carmel, IN: New 
         Riders Publishing.  If you use this in conjunction with the 
         entries in the Last Name and/or the Book Title fields it will 
         further limit the set of records you will find. 

      Use the Keywords fields to find keywords in your list.  Once again, 
         the lists in these combo boxes come from the keywords you are 
         using.  If the keyword you want to search for is not in the 
         list, you have never used that keyword in an entry.  

         Use the keywords 1-3 combo boxes the same way you use the K-
         Selectors in the Master Form. Click on the arrow and scroll down 
         the list to find the keywords you want.  Click on the desired 
         keyword to select it.  For example, the keywords you entered for 
         Inside Microsoft Access were Access, Microsoft, database, and 
         Windows. Selecting Access in Keywords 1 combo box will find all 
         of the records where Access is one of the keywords.  If you 
         select database in Keywords 2, you will find all records that 
         have used database as a keyword.  Entering Windows in Keywords 3 
         finds all of the records that have used Windows as a keyword.  
 
 
         Note: The way to remember how the keywords fields work in the 
         Records Filter is this - entering values in Keywords 1, Keywords 
         2, and Keywords 3 will return all records that contain: 

           Keywords 1  OR  Keywords 2  OR  Keywords 3, 

                                not - 

           Keywords 1  AND  Keywords 2  AND  Keywords 3. 

         Once again, you can use the keywords fields in conjunction with 
         other fields to limit your set of records. 

      Entering 93 in the PubDate field finds all of the reading notes 
         where the publication date is in 1993. 

      In the Comment field, you can search for words or phrases.  Our 
         comment for Inside Microsoft Access was "Excellent manual for 
         advanced Microsoft Access users."  To search in Comment, you can 
         enter: 

         Excellent   --   all comments containing the word "excellent"; 
         advanced Microsoft Access --  all comments containing the phrase 
           "advanced Microsoft Access". 


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      You can also use wildcards in all of the fields which are NOT combo 
         boxes - Last Name, Book Title, Jour/Per Title, PubDate, and 
         Comment.  In the comment field, for example, you can enter: 

         advanced * Access  -- the asterisk (*) character stands for any 
           character or combination of  characters 

      In the last name field, you can enter: 

         ?eddema  -- if you can't remember if Helen's name starts with an 
           "F" or a "P" - the question mark (?) can replace any single 
           character. 

      The last field in the Records Filter you can use is the Select 
         field.  It contains three possibilities: 
     
         No, Yes, and All (the default).  

         This comes in handy if you want to see all of the records you 
         have selected using the Select this Reading Note No-Yes buttons 
         in the Master Form.  To do this, leave all of the other 
         fields blank in the Records Filter, and choose Yes in the 
         Records filter Select field - then press OK. 

      So, to find the first example you entered "Left Means, Right Ends" 
         by William Greider, Rolling Stone, April 1, 1993, keywords 
         Clinton, taxes, conservative, and interest, you can enter any 
         combination of: 

         G (using the alpha-sort buttons) or Greider  --  in the Last 
           Name field; 
         
         Left   or  Left Means, Right Ends   --  in the Jour/Per 
           Title field; Rolling Stone  -- in the Journal combo box; 
         
         Clinton, taxes, conservative, interest  -- in Keywords 1-3; 
         
         April 1, 1993, 1993, April*93  --  in the PubDate field; 
         
         article*Clinton's tax plan  --  in the Comment Field. 

      By the way, if you leave all of the fields blank except that you 
         select interest in Keywords 1 - you will get the Rolling Stone 
         article, and also the book Inside Perestroika by Abel 
         Aganbegyan, (one of the examples we included) because it also 
         uses interest as a keyword. 

      The records filter also comes in handy when you are putting 
         together a large bibliography that may not fit under any one 
         filter criteria.  You can open the Records Filter and apply one 
         set of criteria to filter your records.  When you get back to 
         the Master Form, use the Select this Reading Note No - Yes 
         buttons to mark the desired records from this set, then go back 
         into the Records Filter.  Click the Reset Search Criteria 
         button, and apply a different filter to your records.  Mark them 

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         using the Select this Reading Note No - Yes buttons.  

      You can repeat this process as many times as you would like. When 
         you are done selecting the records you want to use, go back into 
         the Records Filter one more time. Click the Reset Search 
         Criteria button to clear your previous criteria, and then choose 
         Yes in the Records Filter Select field. When you press OK this 
         time, you will get all of the records you have selected. 


  E.) USING THE CONTROL PANEL 

         When you press the Open Control Panel button in the Master Form, 
         the Control Panel opens.  The Control Panel is divided into four 
         sections.  The first section to the left in the Control Panel 
         is: 

     Records Control Buttons 

     1.) Save the Current Record button - saves the record in the Master 
         Form 

     2.) Select All Records button - the equivalent of  pressing the 
         Select This Reading Note - Yes button for every reading note in 
         your database. This button runs a query to update your records. 
         Click on OK when ReadNote asks you if it is ok to update 
         records.  

     3.) Reset Selects to "No" button - exact opposite of the Select All 
         Records button - changes the Select this Reading Note No - Yes 
         buttons to No for the whole database. 

     4.) Make a Table of Selected Records button -  creates a table 
         called Records to Export in the ReadNote database of all the 
         reading notes you have marked "Yes" using the Select this 
         Reading Note No-Yes buttons. This will run a make-table query, 
         answer OK when prompted. 

         Once you have made the Records to Export table using this 
         button, you should close ReadNote, and import the Records to 
         Export table into another Access database. The reason for this 
         is that the next time you use this button, ReadNote will ask you 
         if you want to overwrite the current version of the Records to 
         Export table. (For more information about importing and 
         exporting data, consult your Microsoft Access documentation.) 

     This feature is particularly handy if your word processing program 
         has a mail merge function. You can export the copy of Records to 
         Export table as a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet, or a Wordperfect 
         table for use as bibliography. For users of Microsoft Word for 
         Windows, the Kwery Corporation has a handy little program called 
         Access to Word which will convert Access data into a format that 
         Word can handle.  For more info about Access to Word, contact 
         the Kwery Corporation at 1-800-285-9379, or write them at: 
         

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           Kwery Corporation 
           P.O. Box 6726 
           Bellevue, WA 98008-0726 
 
  PRINTER CONTROL BUTTONS -  make sure your selected printer is turned on 
         before pressing these buttons. 

     1.) Print Current Record - without Comments  --  prints the reading 
         note currently visible in the Master Form, without the comment 
         field included. 

     2.) Print Current Record - including Comments  --  prints the 
         reading note currently visible in the Master Form, including the 
         comment field. 
          
     3.) Print Selected Records - without Comments  -- prints all of the 
         records you have marked "Yes" using the Select this Reading Note 
         No-Yes buttons - without the comment field. 

     4.) Print Selected Records - including Comments -- prints all of the 
         records you have marked "Yes" using the Select this Reading Note 
         No-Yes buttons - including the comment fields. 


  GENERAL CONTROL BUTTONS 

     1.) Open NotePad button -- we've included 2 handy little forms with 
         ReadNote - NotePad and ScratchPad. Also included in the ReadNote 
         Package is a separate database called NotePad.mdb, which has 
         everything you need to add NotePad and ScratchPad to your 
         existing databases.  You can also open NotePad by pressing 
         Ctrl+U. The NotePad is handy for making notes to yourself.  It 
         includes a print command button and a button to close NotePad. 

     2.) Open ScratchPad button -- opens the ScratchPad.  This is handy 
         as a little clipboard that you can copy and edit. It only allows 
         for one record at a time. You can also open the ScratchPad by 
         pressing Ctrl+Y. 

         Technical Note: If you are using an Access database that uses
         an AutoKey macro, make sure that the key assignments for NotePad
         and ScratchPad don't interfere with existing AutoKey assignments.

     3.) Close Master Form - closes the Control Panel, and the Master 
         Form 

     4.) Close Control Panel - just closes the Control Panel. 

     Across the bottom of the Control Panel, there is a combo box with a 
         label that says "Click on Arrow button to view a list of current 
         selected records."  If you have marked "Yes" any reading notes 
         using the Select this Reading Note No-Yes buttons, the Last 
         Name, Title, and Publisher info for those records appear in the 
         list for this combo box.  This combo box doesn't actually do 
         anything, but we found it a handy little tool to add.

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  F.) ENDNOTES 

         We would appreciate any questions, commentary, or suggestions 
         you might have regarding improvements to READNOTE.  You can 
         contact us via Email on: 

            Compuserve: User ID 76300,305 
            Internet:  Internet "EDELSON@Delphi.Com" 

         Thanks again for your interest!!! Greenturtle, Inc. 


         Microsoft is a registered trademark, and Microsoft Access, 
         Microsoft Word for Windows, and windows are trademarks of the 
         Microsoft Corporation.  Access To Word is a product of the Kwery 
         Corporation. 

         ReadNote, and NotePad, Copyright 1993, Greenturtle, Inc.
         
         Greenturtle, Inc. disclaims any warranty or liability, 
         expressed or implied, regarding the fitness and merchantability 
         of READNOTE to be used for a particular purpose.  In no event 
         shall Greeneturtle, Inc. be liable for any damages whatsoever 
         (including, without limitation, damages for loss of business 
         profits, business interruption, loss of business or personal 
         information, or other loss) arising out of the use or inability 
         to use this Greenturtle, Inc. product. 

         You may feel free to distribute this copy of ReadNote as long as 
         no changes or modifications have been made to it. All copies 
         must contain this manual. 

                                                                          




















                                                                           

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                                READNOTE V 1.0 
                              Registration Form 

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         I-DEL

