On Thu, 21 Feb 2019 at 03:12, David Van Horn < david.vanhorn@backcountryaccess.com> wrote: > I forget where I heard this, but I like it: "I have no living enemies... > At all." > More Later. Excessively mundane in my case, alas. Albeit effective :-) Sig line seen long ago. "I think, therefore you are. Don't make me regret it". ____________ On original subject :-) - I have been using Google's voice dictation in Google docs as a '1st trial'. It's a good start for what I needed initially even though limited in accuracy and flexibility. I can copy and paste if desired. More on that anon maybe. Dragon may happen. I'm typing this. Had I realised (stupid!) it would get this long I'd have swapped to voice. Slower than usual but usable. Place broken arm in sling on desk. Slide arm around desk within very limited area to type. Some directions - no pain. Others, some. Others - you rapidly learn not to access those. Pull move lift arm into position when larger movements or lifting needed. Sounds a bit strange (and is) but brain tends to accommodate it unconsciously (as brains tend to do). Probably harder on fracture healing than is strictly good. As of late yesterday I thought the pain reduction was surprisingly good. Until the two sets of overlapping analgesics began to wear off in the early am hours. Um. Lowish pain due to medication can mean you are further damaging the damaged area unwittingly and/or slowing healing and/or (perhaps worst in this case) allowing ongoing attempts at joining at the broken juncture leading to the classic large lump that various people mention. This is probably more likely due more to poor alignment of ends but semi-painlessly Russell > --=20 http://www.piclist.com/techref/piclist PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist .