That's what I said. Celeron 300A, etc. Oh the memories.
Anthony

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of FORC5
Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2011 6:21 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [H] STOP...

dam has it been that long :'(
hard to think about
fp

At 03:33 PM 9/22/2011, DSinc Poked the stick with:
>Greg,
>+1, and for the record I am 63; retired from Xerox after 33yrs.
>
>Julian,
>Good synopsis, but Tom's OC list was ~2 decades ago; so, if may 
>10-finger math still works, you joined as a teenager. Glad you have 
>stuck it out!
>
>Duncan
>
>
>On 09/22/2011 18:19, Greg Sevart wrote:
>>That's a really interesting observation. I also live in a major US 
>>city and work for a very large corporation, and while I do use SMS on 
>>occasion, 99% of my written communication (sent and received) is still 
>>via e-mail. I have a big concern with security of SMS for anything 
>>more sensitive than "we're in conference room 6."
>>
>>It's all about finding the right tool for the job. SMS is a great tool 
>>to have, but I think many have a tendency to use new tools as golden 
>>hammers rather than finding the most appropriate problems for them to
solve.
>>
>>For reference, I'm 28.
>>
>>
>>>-----Original Message-----
>>>From: [email protected] [mailto:hardware-
>>> >> [email protected]] On Behalf Of Bill
>>>Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2011 2:57 PM
>>>To: [email protected]
>>>Subject: Re: [H] STOP...
>>>
>>>Quite correct. The world is changing the way it talks to itself. Big
time.
>>>Quickly.
>>>
>>>I live in a major US city  and work for a large corporation. I can 
>>>share with you that in the last 12 months, SMS texting
>>is
>>>now standard in business. Email is not dead and it will never die ( I
>>think!)
>>>but it is clearly on the decline. In my experience in my world. Here, 
>>>everybody texts. If you send someone an email, you have to text them 
>>>and let them know they have an email in their Inbox. Because they 
>>>never check it. It ain't just kids anymore, sad to say.
>>>
>>>You almost define your age by how you communicate. Someone joked with 
>>>me the other day that landlines and email are for "people over 50."
>>Sheesh.
>>>If you want to propose marriage and express your undying love for 
>>>someone, you have to do it in less than 160 characters.....
>>>
>>>Bill
>>>Sent from my iPhone
>>
>
>__________ Information from ESET Smart Security, version of virus 
>signature database 6486 (20110922) __________
>
>The message was checked by ESET Smart Security.
>
>http://www.eset.com
>
>

--
Tallyho ! ]:8)
Taglines below !
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Time goes? No.  Alas time stays, we go.

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