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![]() wrote in message ... On Thu, 08 Oct 2009 18:57:33 -0400, H the K wrote: On 10/8/09 6:52 PM, Tim wrote: On Oct 8, 5:41 pm, Vic wrote: On Thu, 8 Oct 2009 10:15:40 -0400, Tosk wrote: Yes, after a very deliberate insinuation that they were "the internet". It made many older folks afraid to leave them.. Years ago when I built computers, I used to put it right in the contract "installing anything AOL voids the warrantee, period". My dad's computer was running out of memory when I was down there so I disabled all the startup items with msconfig. Think he has 2gb memory. Didn't bother looking at the list, but it was long. Probably AOL's fault. But it could be a Bush or Obama doing. --Vic If you shut down AOL, occasionally it would stop the shut down so it could clean out a bunch of it's "artwork" which was a real pig on memory space. i wonder how much AOL pays computer mfj's to still pre load AOL on new machines. i know there were lots of people crabbing about trying to find a new machine that didn't have AOL preloaded on it. I haven't seen a new computer with AOL on it for some years. Even the CD mailings have stopped. AOL does not have much proprietary content anymore. They want to be Google, just selling ads and making the service free. I think they would be just as happy to get out of the software business. I still think the AOL 7 (the version I run) still has the best Email client around. It beats Thunderbird and all the various microsoft crap. That's 'cause you're used to it. I used to have an offline reader for CIS that did email as well, and I thought *that* was the cat's meeow. Same was true with ReplayTV, and after 2 years with it, had to learn TIVO when I went to DirecTV. Now DTV has their own brand of DVR, and since I'm finally used to it... it's the best. g All software has it's good an bad. Whatever floats yer boat... --Mike |