it depends on what you are talking about, to erase a contact, focus on the address you want to remove. there will be a place that says 'edit' or 'delete' by that name. hit delete. or if you want to remove the address off of an email that you are forwarding, highlight by holding down the left mouse button and highlight what you want deleted, then hold down your 'ctrl' button on the keyboard and hit 'x' that is the cut command for cut, copy and paste
Go onto the computer then delete it there
click the right button and it will say delete
DELETE unwanted, worthless ASK
Its not. If you didn't have internet on when you turned on the computer you wouldn't of received the email. When you sign in to your email all emails that have been sent to you are retrieved. And also unless the computer is switched off at the wall it is not fully "off" otherwise it wouldn't know what the time is.
No, simply rebooting your computer (turning it off, then on again) does not erase all the data on the computer. However, you can lose unsaved data on files that you are currently working on if you don't save. Reformatting (reinstalling your operating system) will erase all the data on your computer and set it back to its default settings.
leave the computer turned off forever !
Make shure you wipe off all their email addresses and other personal stuff. If they have already done that then your okay, the good thing is they might still have some software so that means you don't have to pay for it.
uhhh whats that mean
You have to log onto your iTunes account on your computer and delete all of the songs there. You can't do it on your iPod.
You click the "my friends" button then check off each friend then on the delete export email section then click on delete selected friends.
Dry erase markers - it can erase off of anything, like Boards, Hands, etc... Wet Erase markers - it will be a little harder for people to take off of anything.
A free email is where a service provides you with a email address for free. POP3 is a method of downloading your email off of the mail server and onto your computer, or somewhere else.