Do you people have calendars at home? Do you have time
machines? WTF are you people thinking? It's 2004, NOT
1995. GEEZ. Spend a few dollars, hell at least go to
Windows 98.
anonymous@discussions.microsoft.com - 09 Apr 2004 19:45 GMT
Yeah
>-----Original Message-----
>Do you people have calendars at home? Do you have time
>machines? WTF are you people thinking? It's 2004, NOT
>1995. GEEZ. Spend a few dollars, hell at least go to
>Windows 98.
>.
Ron Martell - 09 Apr 2004 20:28 GMT
>Do you people have calendars at home? Do you have time
>machines? WTF are you people thinking? It's 2004, NOT
>1995. GEEZ. Spend a few dollars, hell at least go to
>Windows 98.
And if your hardware isn't sufficient to run Windows 98 and you can't
afford a new machine?
Ron Martell Duncan B.C. Canada

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Larry Shelquist - 09 Apr 2004 23:35 GMT
W95 Does everything I need it to do. Why should I change?
> Do you people have calendars at home? Do you have time
> machines? WTF are you people thinking? It's 2004, NOT
> 1995. GEEZ. Spend a few dollars, hell at least go to
> Windows 98.
Think outside yourself. - 27 Apr 2004 16:38 GMT
I run a few different machines, one of which uses Windows
95. It is an older machine used strictly for accounting
purposes for my businesses. It is not connected to the
internet. Most importantly, it never crashes, which makes
me happy. Oh yeah, watch your language.
>-----Original Message-----
>Do you people have calendars at home? Do you have time
>machines? WTF are you people thinking? It's 2004, NOT
>1995. GEEZ. Spend a few dollars, hell at least go to
>Windows 98.
>.