On Fri, 27 Apr 2001, Kent West wrote: > Joe 'Zonker' Brockmeier wrote: > > Whatever you do, be sure to send an email to AOL about > > their lack of support - particularly if you switch > > providers. Vote with your pocketbook. Granted, if you're > > the only guy who does it, they'll probably not get too > > upset. But, as Arlo Guthrie says, if fifty people do it, > > they might think it's a movement... :) > > I had an AOL account two or three years ago. I either called or emailed > them (I don't remember which) and asked if they had a Linux client. When > they responded "no", I cancelled my account and told them I was now a > Linux user. So that makes at least one (former) customer they've heard > from.
Good for you! :) Earthlink has earned my business because when I called about setting up ISP service with them, the customer support guy responded positively about Linux and gave me all the info I needed to set up my connection. Some companies listen, some don't. Yahoo!, for example, finally has a client for just about every platform for their IM client, including Linux. And if it's not directly supported, you can use the Java client. I'm hoping that someone will come up with a Free Software equivalent of QuarkXPress as good as the Gimp. I've contacted Quark a few times, and they still thumb their nose at Linux - which is a shame, because I'm sure a lot of publishers would like to be able to run their art departments on a stable OS. I started on computers in an art department using Quark on MacOS 7.1... the "save" hotkey combination was hard-wired into my brain after about two days because I was constantly getting unexplained system errors. Too bad AOL isn't more clueful... someday AOL could stand for America On Linux instead of America Off-Line... Zonker -- Joe 'Zonker' Brockmeier -=- [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.ZonkerBooks.net/ -=- ICQ: 43599611 =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= "A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof was to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools." -- Douglas Adams