Duncan, I'm lurking. :) http://alanger.net/pc/slot/index.html
peace and joy to you and yours, al On Fri, 23 Sep 2011 08:51:46 -0400 DSinc <[email protected]> wrote: > LMAO!!!!!!!! > I just knew some others were lurking! > Long live the Almighty C-300A! > I do have a matched, mint pair of them if somebody > is still into antique PC's...............:) > LOL! > Duncan > > > On 09/23/2011 08:08, Anthony A Riederer wrote: > > 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 ! > > -- > > Time goes? No. Alas time stays, we go. > > > > -- Al Anger <[email protected]>
