It was Premier.Net in BR -- and Tyrel.Net in its home country which I 
think was Kansas City or something like that.

They ticked off a lot of BR users when we finally learned that their 
"T1 Line" that they kept bragging about was only from the home office 
to their Internet connection.  From BR to the home office was a mere 128K line.

I stayed with Premier..net until they @Home got into my neighborhood.

Terry

At 09:03 PM 9/27/2007, you wrote:
>God, I still remember Tyrel Net or whatever it was here in Baton Rouge..
>
>--
>Puryear Information Technology, LLC
>Baton Rouge, LA * 225-706-8414
>http://www.puryear-it.com
>
>Author, "Best Practices for Managing Linux and UNIX Servers"
>   http://www.puryear-it.com/pubs/linux-unix-best-practices
>
>Identity Management, LDAP, and Linux Integration
>
>
>Fernando Vilas wrote:
> > On Thursday 27 September 2007 19:31:50 Petri Laihonen wrote:
> >> I see nothing wrong with top posting.
> >> These lug lists are the only ones where it seems to be an issue. For the
> >> rest of the world it is just normal.
> >>
> >
> > The rest of the world does it by default because Outlook, Outlook 
> Express, and
> > GMail do it by default.  KMail sets up the email assuming you 
> want to bottom
> > post, and most older mail/news clients did the same.  For many 
> years, bottom
> > posting was the standard, both in email and in usenet posts...  at least
> > until MS got their own TCP stack, so users didn't need Trumpet 
> Winsock on one
> > floppy and Mosaic on another to browse the web.  Damn, I feel old 
> for knowing
> > that.  Worse since I can still find my 3.5" floppies with Trumpet 
> Winsock for
> > WFW 3.11 on it.


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