Hi, Paul: I can't tell you how you're supposed to do this, because I don't use the menus in lynx to accomplish it. Rather, I retrieve my .lynxrc into my favorite text editor and create file references for the alphabetic letters that I want by hand. If you do this, be sure to save a copy of .lynxrc to a backup file first, in case you make a mistake. The other part, imho, is to organize those files into a directory of their own, so they're not scattered in your root directory listing. Also, I redo the html header to my taste. Lynx is perfectly happy with that. For reference, I've included my stock header file as an attachment. If you do all of this as the user you will be when you start lynx, all should work out OK. Here's what I do: create $HOME/html I make my default file (what you get by pressing 'a') to be: $HOME/html/lynxmark.html -- but it could still be $HOME/lynx_bookmarks.html or $HOME/html/lynx_bookmarks.html, or whatever. I have several others. For example, for the letter 'l' I have: $HOME/html/linux.html For the letter 'm' I have: $HOME/html/music.html And so forth. By the way, I don't put $HOME in the.lynxrc file, though it may well work to do that. Rather, I put ./html/ -- Janina Sajka, Director Technology Research and Development Governmental Relations Group American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) Email: janina at afb.net Phone: (202) 408-8175 Chair, Accessibility SIG Open Electronic Book Forum (OEBF) http://www.openebook.org -------------- next part -------------- An embedded and charset-unspecified text was scrubbed... Name: head.txt URL: <http://linux-speakup.org/pipermail/speakup/attachments/20020630/eca4fc0d/attachment.txt>