Writers--Please steer me to a laptop for word processing

It sounds like your old computer was very very old indeed and only had about a 500MB hard drive. As opposed to a 500 Gigabytes hard drive being more common these days, a thousand times bigger. Indeed, people now freely talk in terabytes, which hard drives now come in multiples of.

OK, if you say so, but as others noted, your ways of document management are somewhat unique.
You might take to working from the (new) computer and making a backup of everything you worked on once a week, or once a day if it’s very important. You can make the backup on USB, CD/DVD, or by emailing to yourself.

Keeping documents on two floppies but not on the hard drive is pointless. Your mistrust may have been misplaced, because if the hard drive had been faulty you would have asked a different question (such as “Computer won’t start without incomprehensible errors. Help!”).

And if a fool wipes your documents again, even if he’s emptied the recycle bin (presuming you use windows) there’s always recovery tools that will allow you tu get lost items back.

And, even if you make several copies, if your house burns down, or something else happens that seriously affects your home, they will all be destroyed.
But the email will still be there.

As long as she doesn’t email them to me. :wink:

And with web-based mail, like Yahoo, you have a large, permanent storage site. And if you use Yahoo to mail it to your Yahoo account you even have an automatic second backup.

Oh my gosh, I thought they already were separate folders within My Documents! [Blushes] I kind of pieced together my own methods of storage, based upon what I remembered from old computer classes, which weren’t so long ago…back when our computer was still new. I will be taking your advice on learning more about file management and backing up documents. Please don’t worry that I took your statements as patronizing; I knew I needed advice, and I appreciate you taking time to comment.

Thanks also to those who suggested I email the documents to my new computer. I knew there had to be a way to get them over there, but hadn’t yet gotten to how I was going to do it.

So how old is the current computer actually? What system does it run? Are we talking DOS or windows 95?

Or else you use one of those computer desks with a slide-out keyboard shelf.

I’d highly recommend making an appointment with an IT dude, e.g. the Geek Squad, or even a friend who’s well versed in IT to discuss what your needs are. He can steer you in the right direction. Once you decide on a computer, he can help move files to your new computer, install your printer to print wirelessly, set up a network, etc., install your new mailbox (which should come with whatever method of internet access you choose to you), not to mention show you very easy and reliable methods of backing up your data (e.g. flash drives) that will prove to be worth far more than you’ll pay him.

There’s no reason to be wandering around blind anymore.

Sorry it took me so long to answer, but I seem to have the flu. It’s Windows Me.

I want to thank everyone for their help. I’m in an economically depressed rural area, and while I wouldn’t say laptops are rare here, most people who have computers have desktops, often without the latest technology. The thinking tends to be that as long as it works, why replace it? I don’t have many options in terms of asking for advice, and I wanted to be sure those I asked first didn’t have an interest in actually selling me a computer. Aw, shit, I keep having coughing fits, so I’m going to sign off. Thank you again.