No prob!
Also,
http://www.livestrong.com is awesome. I've been using it to record everything I eat and drink for about 10 days now, and in that time I've lost another 5 lbs, after having hit a plateau for a while.
You plug in your age, height, weight, daily activity level, and weight goals. The most you can select is a target of +/- 2 lbs a week gain or loss, because that's what's sustainable. For me to lose 2 lbs a week they're allowing me just over 1600 net calories a day (and as you lose weight and enter your lower weight, it adjusts this number down). I've found it pretty easy to stick to, and haven't really changed my diet much at all. I was eating fairly healthy stuff anyway, but I'm certainly not starving myself.
The coolest part is that having to plug everything in, it really makes you aware of where your empty, not even satisfying calories are. I was wasting a whole lot of calories on bullshit drinks, juices and sodas etc. When you open the fridge and there's a can of coke and a bottle of water there, knowing that the can of coke costs you 140 calories makes it that much easier to reach for the water. That's not to say that it's never OK to have a soda, but it helps you realize that you should have a soda
when you want a soda, rather than just drinking something mindlessly because you were thirsty.
Livestrong also lets you plug in the exercise you're doing, and counts that against calories consumed. So I started the day yesterday with 1600~ calories available, but did a lot of exercise and burned close to 1500 calories, so I ended up coming in almost 700 calories under my daily allowance.
The one thing I'd say is vital when using this is to be honest and when in doubt, over-estimate how many calories are in whatever you're eating. If you guess something is 300 and it turns out it's actually only 220, well then great, you just saved yourself 80. Better that way that consuming a bunch that you don't mean to because you're in a fantasy world where mayo doesn't really count because it's just part of the sandwich. It's a total cliche, but you're only cheating yourself.