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On Fri, 10 Dec 2004 01:10:13 GMT, "
wrote: Interesting. So, do you still use Windows with a replacement for Outlook Express together with the link that you pointed to or do you pay for extra computor protection? I abandoned the home versions of Windows long long ago (I use Win2000 Pro). I got it pretty cheap as a computer upgrade, all I had to do was buy some hardware to qualify, and I bought the hard disk that I have it running on right now, in the old system (just added it as drive two, and use the original drive for storage). I have NEVER used Outlook Express. I bought Agent after using Free Agent for a year. I wanted to combine my News reader with a Mail reader that had very good filters. Those filters, once I trained them, act like bug zappers and automatically trash Spam. I have 8 filters that steer acceptable email to different folders; I have 10 filters that deletes porn; I have 4 filters that ignore odds and ends that I can look at if I want (but ends up in the trash anyway). Agent is $35 and I've been using it for 8 years. I am also using Firefox now (it lit up in seconds where Netscape stumbled along). I also use Agnitum Outpost Firewall (free version). It always lets me know when some piece of trash wants to call home. I say no, and then take out the trash. I must admit that I thought everything was as one should expect until I used the free ' adware' to check how clean or dirty the computor was and I was really shocked. Fortunately with the help of an inserted disc I am able to run my antenna programs in what I see as a DOS emulator which allows me to use high speed processing without the fear of outside interference and slow down. I have heard that Netscape has its problems but does not have enough useage to attract bad guys and commercial collectors. That has nothing to do with it. It is the "features" of IE and OE that are the back doors to the system. Do you want to share your printer with the world? MS thinks you do, and has designed this into their OS as a special feature for your "benefit." Tho I have done computor programming in Fortran and the like in the old days when we used punched tape I must admit to being totally illiterate when computors changed over to pre caned programming to which I turned up my nose too, only to find I was quickly left behind and not adaptable to change. It just runs faster. Being bigger means no one person really understands it all. When the operating systems were 15,000 bytes big, you could figure it out in a weekend. Multiply that by a million weekends. Only Chinese teenagers have that kind of patience. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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