>Have car insurance, get a new car, and you better promptly tell your insurance agent so new risks and premiums can be determined. But with cars, they carry a title slip that ensures who exactly owns it when it gets stolen. >Have family health insurance, get a new family member, better promptly tell insurance agent. The who is always exact. >Have homeowners insurance, move to a new house, better promptly tell your insurance agent, since risks and premiums are partly determined by type of house and location. The ownership is always determinable. >Have general commercial insurance, develop a new line of business or >materially change key employees, better promptly tell your insurance agent. Whether they actually work for you can be determined by pay check records. === With a computer, there is no 'title'. Ownership is vague at best. If you called in and said you wanted the policy transferred to your 'new' computer, all would be fine until you later had a problem with your original computer (which you never really sold) and you deny knowing anything about anybody who might have said that you had a new computer. You say it wasn't you. Must have been someone else. Having computer registered with a title document with the state or such and then you can move the policy from one computer to another. -- <><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><> Robert Ameeti mailto:robert at ameeti.net <><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>