It's been a good ride. Wish them the best.
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It's been a good ride. Wish them the best.
And the same pack of "Flat-Earthers" that "killed" that format change were still bellyaching, still "looking for solutions" to the old software deficiencies and b!tching about this format right up to the minute they pulled the plug on the old CSP! Some folks just seem to have minds so narrow that they can only use 1" wide notepads!
In IT, "change" is a given, and the one thing that you can't do is stand still!
Dead on, John . . .
Perhaps you are correct, John, but for some of us who are not "computer literate' change is difficult, and there are some changes which do not come easily. Im sure Im not alone in wishing for some things that used to be and are no longer around. I reckon that most of us could list many examples.
I realize that once in awhile "change" is necessary, but I also think that "change" just for the sake of "change" is foolish, and perhaps got us to where we are now. (And I dont mean THIS format) "Hope and Change", Sound familiar? :bow:Just one OFs opinion..... :confused: Ken
Quirky of me Ken, but I've always wanted to know how stuff works....can't stand it when I don't, which is probably why I became an engineer! What "computer literacy" I have....and it's limited, is based on that drive. What I can do, anyone can do....it ain't that tough!Quote:
Perhaps you are correct, John, but for some of us who are not "computer literate' change is difficult,
And if a pig had wings, it'd be an eagle! There are also tons of things that I'm glad are gone for good....breaker-point ignitions come immediately to mind...septic infections and polio are another! Progress equals change, and it's inevitable....the alternative is extinction!Quote:
and there are some changes which do not come easily. Im sure Im not alone in wishing for some things that used to be and are no longer around. I reckon that most of us could list many examples.
Once in a while? Okey Dokey, but I disagree...."change" is the rule, not the exception! The rest is an "academic" point, and NOT applicable to this situation. The change wasn't just "necessary", it was vital....the alternative (doing nothing, maintaining the "status quo") was the complete extinction of CSP! CSP had become a malware portal....it's antiquated software, created in a simpler, more benign (more naive) time was vulnerable to purveyors of malware....and they exploited those vulnerabilities! AOL had already blocked CSP, and other ISP's were about to (including mine!).Quote:
I realize that once in awhile "change" is necessary, but I also think that "change" just for the sake of "change" is foolish, and perhaps got us to where we are now. (And I dont mean THIS format)
Had Mrs. Culver been able to upgrade the software back when she was trying to....this change could have happened more gradually and the "transparency" that certain folks got their panties in a wad over could have happened. As it was, it became a case of "crisis management", and some folks got what they considered "bruised toes". Tough beans! The "Scheiss-Sturm" that happened when Mrs Culver TRIED to change software formats got us to where we were last week....and it was largely the same corps that continue to carp that nixed that change in the first place ("Vox populi....vox humbug!")! It been a classic case of arranging deck-chairs on the "Titanic" ever since!
Folks over on the Enfield Forum saw the inevitable end first....and seem to have been the leaders in finding a new CSP home. We owe them a great vote of thanks (instead of accusing them of venal conspiracy!). Yes, it has required "change"; and even though you may object to said "change"....failure to do so has even greater consequences.....remember the Dodo?
To a certain extent I agree with John K. As a retired PC Tech, I had to face the fact that my Commodore 64 just didn't cut it anymore. Ditto my first XT that sits in the atttic. It's fun to fire it up occasionally but it just won't do Windows.
That said, it was still painfull to see the old CSP shut down for the last time. We had so many good times there, even the old pizzing contests are missed. We are creatures of habit and it's hard to move on to something new yet again.
As I scan the obits in my local dish rag today I see that I'm not in there, even though an old shooting friend is. It's going to be a good day.
I've got an old Apple 2E (who says you've gotta have a hard-drive!) as well as the first 386 box I built (with a 10 meg WD hard-drive that cost more than my current Dell lap-top!)! We won't even talk about Fortran IV or the IBM 1160 I "learned" on
On 6 march I got the 403, on 7 March, I was re-directed to this new location.. I have both in my "favorites".
"Folks over on the Enfield Forum saw the inevitable end first....and seem to have been the leaders in finding a new CSP home. We owe them a great vote of thanks (instead of accusing them of venal conspiracy!). Yes, it has required "change"; and even though you may object to said "change"....failure to do so has even greater consequences.....remember the Dodo?"[/SIZE][/QUOTE]
I think I did say I wasnt talking about this forum, perhaps you missed it?
Yes, I remember breaker point ignition, and I remember it could be fixed without having to spend a fortune or involving technicians with scanalyzers.
I am not against change per se, but I am not rushing blindly out to change what I have become accustomed to simply because Mr. Jones next door has something with more bells and whistles on it. I also see the forces of change working to revise the constitution, and it is my wish that they do not succeed. Change does not in every instance mean progress. If that makes me a Dodo, so be it.:dunno: