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On Mon, 4 Nov 2024 16:17:59 +0000, Citizen Winston Smith wrote:What do you run today?
>On 11/3/2024 9:02 PM, dsi1 wrote:>On Mon, 4 Nov 2024 3:40:08 +0000, Bruce wrote:Nail him to an XTree!
On Mon, 4 Nov 2024 03:10:01 +0000, dsi100@yahoo.com (dsi1) wrote:Ha ha, that's really funny. What are you, a comedian now?
On Mon, 4 Nov 2024 1:39:23 +0000, Michael Trew wrote:I'd prefer MS-DOS 6.0.
On 11/3/2024 7:44 AM, heyjoe wrote:If you have an older computer, you might try out ChromeOS Flex. It'sMichael Trew wrote :I tested agent once, and the learning curve frustrated me. I suppose I
I think the last version for Win7 is 115. I thought about finding myThunderbird is really an email client that just happens to do usenet
old version, but it was glitching and sending error messages on most
e-mails, to the point it was becoming not usable. I'll try with this
newer version for a while, but I really should just learn how to use
Linux and ditch Windows all together.
as an afterthought. There are better usenet clients out there.
Since you have to learn a new Thunderbird, maybe you should switch to
a better news reader and learn that. Agent 8 is pretty much
abandonware at this point, but is still one of the best. There are
keys available on the 'net to activate it (rumour has it the Forté
web site won't accept payment for a new key).
didn't give it much of a chance.
While learning Linux is not difficult, it is not a drop inWindows gets worse with each version, and I lost patience after W7.
replacement for Windows. The initial learning curve can be steep and
frustrating for long time Windows users. Been a slacker for 10+
years and I'd never use Windows as my daily O/S. YMMV
I'm
still hanging on, but I'm going to install Linux Mint or something onto
an older laptop to tinker with it, I think.
supposed to run well on computers no longer capable enough to handle
Windows.
https://www.xtreefanpage.org/lowres/docs/xtgw4sc.gif
I really loved MS-DOS 6. I didn't switch over to Windows until 2000.
That was the year I finally saw the writing on the wall. I put up with
Windows for around a decade then saw yet more writing on the wall. It
was time to get off the never ending Microsoft merry-go-round.
Typically, I don't care for merry-go-rounds and chasing my tail in
circles.
>
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.