Okay... I have a weird one (actually two) that maybe someone has some ideas about. We've got 1.8c running on Windows NT. In the site.catalog I have: listname.CATALOG C:\LISTSERV\dir\listdir\listname.CATALOG ALL OWNER(listname) In the file listname.CATALOG (yes, it's in the right path), I have: listname.FILE1 listname.FILE1 ALL OWNER(listname) If I tell LISTSERV to GET listname.FILE1, it sends it to me, no questions asked, so it obviously knows where the file is. But... if I do an INDEX listname all I get back is a list of the LOGyymm files, and none of the files listed in listname.CATALOG. If I do INDEX listname.CATALOG, I get an error (no surprise) that says that listname.CATALOG.FILELIST doesn't exist. If I change listname.CATALOG to listname.FILELIST (just for grins), it tells me it's sending the filelist, but it never does. Anyone have any ideas? Oh... and while I'm at it... we're GMT -0500, and the control panel in NT says that, and the log gives the correct time, but a SHOW STATS and outgoing mail shows us as GMT -0000. Is there a hidden "feature" here? And for anyone migrating to NT in the near future, there's a thing you should know about your NT setup that is not-quite-documented yet. (Nathan did the "I coulda had a V8" slap on the forehead when we were having major backlog problems on our new system earlier this week.) Go into the Registry Editor (regedt32) to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE. Select SYSTEM. Select CurrentControlSet. Select FileSystem. Select the first item (NtfsDisable8dot3FileNameCreation or something like that) and set it to 1, not 0... otherwise when you migrate, you may find yourself backlogged to the hilt while your SMTP workers thrash around on DOS-compatible filenames. (This is your brain. This is your brain on DOS. Just say "No". Friends don't let friends do DOS.) Thanks! -Holly