Hi b noir, QuickTimeKirk, and Jacumba,
I think you guys are homing in on the answer. I really appreciate your help and expertise. To answer your last question, QuickTimeKirk, when I right-click the mp3 link, I get an option to save it locally. I can do that, and then it opens as I want with Windows Media Player if I've set the local options that way. However, there are a zillion Spanish-language audio clips that I'm dealing with, and it is just too cumbersome to be downloading them. I just want to double-click and have them come up in Windows Media Player. I had hoped when I right-clicked the mp3 link there would be an option "Open with" so that I could choose the application, but there is not. There is only "Open" and it opens with QuickTime.
I think though, Jacumba, that you may have found the answer. If I read correctly what you said, if you go into "Start", "Programs", "Set Program Access and Defaults", and set mp3 access to Windows Media Player, that when you double-click the mp3 link, it does come up in Windows Media Player. If, on the other hand, you set that access to QuickTime, double-clicking brings the mp3 link up in QuickTime. Right?
Is this what would happen to you guys -- QuickTimeKirk and b noir?
If that is the case, then part of what I told you about this PC is not correct -- a critical part. I am actually a student at the University of Montana using one of the university's computers. The computer administrator apparently tried very hard, without success, to keep QuickTime from taking over as default. I have access to all of the local settings and can change them as I've said so that QuickTime is not the default -- and that is what happens as a result. If I download the file from the link and double-click it locally, it comes up in Windows Media Player. However, I do not have access to the settings under "Start", "Programs", "Set Program Access and Defaults", which require administrator priveleges. I asked the administrator if he had set the access to Windows Media Player, and he told me what I told you earlier that "I" had done -- he said that was the first thing he tried -- but he was telling me this from memory and did not double-check that is actually the case on the PC. However, from what Jacumba is saying, I wonder if the mp3 setting there, on this PC, really is Windows Media Player, or if it is QuickTime.
If you other two guys could reproduce Jacumba's experience -- that all is required to make the mp3 link come up in Windows Media Player is to set Windows Media Player as the default under "Start", "Programs", "Set Program Access and Defaults", then I think it would be pretty definite that you have identified what the problem is, and I could go to the administrator with that information.
I really appreciate your help on this.