Aha: You can skip the lengthy explanation below of how I got there and just go to
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1dOzg3D7xVyud2SHHXN0KpP__bib-nNOL/editTech things often present challenges. I was able to overcome the challenge and I will describe my solution.
Here is the link from above:
https://tinyurl.com/mrycy7fzThere are three ways for me to open such a link but they all lead to the same result.
The three ways are to
click on it in your message,
copy it and insert it in google and open it,
or, after inserting it in google, a highlighted form appears and I can click on that.
These all open up at the URL:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1U4ubDgm611WikH_f6FLeJTKrdhmD_EeKOk, this might be the start of the issue. The URL that opens begins "drive.google" rather than "tinyurl".
But of course something is open so can I work with that? yep, but it wasn't easy.
What I see in front of me after
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1U4ubDgm611WikH_f6FLeJTKrdhmD_EeK opens is the word "Folders" and beneath "folders" I see "2022.02" and "2022.04"
Over on a side panel there is stuff about "owner" and "who has access".
So I click on "2022.04" in the main panel.
Nothing opens immediately but the side panel changes.
I now go to the side panel and click on "2204.04".
This brings up, in the main panel, icons for 10 documents, a mix of pdf, word and x (I have no idea what an x document is).
I click on the one called "Challenge2..." It's a word document.
It opens, although I can only see part of it, in the side panel.
So I go over to the side panel and click on it, the part of "Challenge..." that I see, and it opens full size.
Now I would like to have it easily available in the future so I hope to save it. I go over to "file", find "download, and click on "download". It gives me downloading options including "'pdf" and '.word". I like the pdf format so I click on that.
A pdf file is created, I find the option to "download", and click on it. It downloads, unopened.
I open the downloaded pdf file.
Open pdf files can be saved to my desktop so I do that.
And now it is right there whenever I wish to open it.
Thoughts: Tech things are usually easy providing you know what you are supposed to do and near to impossible if you do not know what you are to do. Very very possibly there is a much simpler way to get to the file, but the above approach is the only way that I found.
In 1954 I bought a 1947 Plymouth for $175 that not surprisingly needed work. So I figured it out. But a wrench gets applied to a bolt, pretty obvious. Not quite so obvious with tech.