You have run two interesting articles in the past two weeks on downloading music. You may well be interested in this product ( www.rogueamoeba.com/airfoil/ ). It seems to do what Ian Johnston sought. I have yet to try it, but plan to. Alan Wright Address supplied I have had a look at this and it certainly appears to be interesting. I have not bought an AirPort Express, so I cannot test the software. The price does not seem excessive if it works and you can download a demo and play with it first. Sounds all right to me. More IE problems I am experiencing the same problem as Chris from Happy Valley regarding Internet Explorer not working. The PC uses Chinese Windows 2000, and we have tried reinstalling the IE6 software several times, but in all cases, the software does not open and instead we get an error message. Because we use anti-virus software all the time we are guessing that files have been corrupted, but why the problem persists after multiple downloads from Microsoft's website is beyond me. So far, our way around the problem is to double click My Computer and from this menu, open the Favourites bookmarks to access the internet. However, clicking on links that require opening a new window in IE6 will bring about the initial problem again. My alternative is to use the Firefox browser, but not all people in the office know how to use it. Harry Chen Address supplied I am not sure what you are saying. The Favourites folder contains links to webpages. If you double-click on such a link, your browser will spring to life, but it will go to the webpage of the link instead of the normal homepage. If you look at what appears underneath Favourites, you will see that it corresponds to the contents of the folder of the same name. One experiment you could try is to empty the folder by copying everything to another place and then seeing what happens when there is nothing there. You may also want to empty the Cookies folder (again, by copying the contents should you want to restore it). You may also want to check on what is being loaded automatically when you boot. The best way to test these is to boot a system that has nothing else running. These problems usually occur because of some kind of conflict or, as you say, a corrupt file, though I doubt the anti-virus software would have caused that. If you do not have a system of getting the latest signatures quickly, you could have a virus already. Eagle-eyed reader Let me get this straight. A guy writes to you saying he cannot open Internet Explorer - at best it is the IE title in the task bar. Microsoft's solution starts Open Internet Explorer. I think I understand why you're an Apple buff. Peter Mallen Address supplied Extremely well spotted. Windows has no menu-bar at the top, so Mr Mallen is quite right to point out this silliness. I should have seen it. I would disagree with the 'Apple buff' comment. Apart from not being any kind of buff, I prefer Unix, a real operating system. Safe and robust. Not perhaps quite so easy to use, but that is a different subject.