On Fri, Aug 01, 2003 at 03:42:46PM -0700, Paul Beard wrote:
>
> On Friday, August 01, 2003, at 08:03AM, Adam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >On Fri, 2003-08-01 at 03:24, W. D. wrote:
> >> You will then
> >> have had an "out of the box" experience, or "OBE".
> >
> >Why must we insist on confusin
On Friday, August 01, 2003, at 08:03AM, Adam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On Fri, 2003-08-01 at 03:24, W. D. wrote:
>> You will then
>> have had an "out of the box" experience, or "OBE".
>
>Why must we insist on confusing non-English patrons?
>
>OBE means 'out of body experience', and is comple
>
> On Fri, 2003-08-01 at 03:24, W. D. wrote:
> > You will then
> > have had an "out of the box" experience, or "OBE".
>
> Why must we insist on confusing non-English patrons?
>
> OBE means 'out of body experience', and is completely different from the
> current topic.
Well, for some people
On Fri, 2003-08-01 at 03:10, Peter Rosa wrote:
> sorry for the stupid question, which should not be here,
> but sometimes you use phrase "OUT-OF-THE-BOX".
> It can be also found on FBSD web-pages. I'm not from
> english-speaking country and I really do not know what
> does it mean.
> Can you explai
On Fri, 2003-08-01 at 03:24, W. D. wrote:
> You will then
> have had an "out of the box" experience, or "OBE".
Why must we insist on confusing non-English patrons?
OBE means 'out of body experience', and is completely different from the
current topic.
--
Adam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
[Mykroft Holmes IV wrote ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) on 8/1/03 6:56 AM]
> Out of The Box means 'Like New', and unmodified. It's the condition the
> item being referred to would be in when it was rem,oved from it's box.
in the software world it often means that something just works, ie you
install it and
Out of The Box means 'Like New', and unmodified. It's the condition the
item being referred to would be in when it was rem,oved from it's box.
Adam
Peter Rosa wrote:
Hello everybody,
sorry for the stupid question, which should not be here,
but sometimes you use phrase "OUT-OF-THE-BOX".
It can
At 02:10 8/1/2003, Peter Rosa, wrote:
>Hello everybody,
>
>sorry for the stupid question, which should not be here,
>but sometimes you use phrase "OUT-OF-THE-BOX".
>It can be also found on FBSD web-pages. I'm not from
>english-speaking country and I really do not know what
>does it mean.
>Can you e
Hello everybody,
sorry for the stupid question, which should not be here,
but sometimes you use phrase "OUT-OF-THE-BOX".
It can be also found on FBSD web-pages. I'm not from
english-speaking country and I really do not know what
does it mean.
Can you explain, please ?
Thanks and regards.
Peter R