A Conversation for Testing -- please ignore
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Jenny and Fred the cheese Started conversation Mar 29, 2000
should i be able to hear something? cos i can't
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Irving Washington - Gone Writing Posted Mar 29, 2000
er... I'm trying to figgure this out... it used to work, I *swear*. Just a few hours ago, when I left, it worked for me. Now it doesn't. One of the reasons that it says "please ignore", I suppose
~Irving
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Irving Washington - Gone Writing Posted Mar 29, 2000
Try it now, though be prepared to be annoyed as I haven't figgured out how to let people turn it on and off themselves
~Irving
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J'au-æmne Posted Mar 30, 2000
Are you going for reverse psychology, with the heading "please ignore"? Because there was absolutely no way I could... sorry...
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Irving Washington - Gone Writing Posted Mar 30, 2000
No, honestly I just didn't want people coming over here expecting something that would work, and getting something that didn't. Did the sound file work for you?
~Irving
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J'au-æmne Posted Mar 30, 2000
It says it's, "Loading audio file..." But I don't believe it one little bit. This was in Netscape 4.7...
In IE five it works fine, however... it did get stuck for a second, but thats probably my computer being itself even more than usual.. but it sounds cool
BTW I use windoze, for my sins.
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Irving Washington - Gone Writing Posted Mar 30, 2000
I have not yet been able to test it in Windows. As far as Netscape v. IE, it SHOULD still work, I'm using 4.7 and it works for me. Hmmmm.... maybe it has to do with windows as the file seems to show up in Quicktime on my computer...
~Irving
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J'au-æmne Posted Mar 30, 2000
IE shows it with the quicktime style scroll bar, but it doesn't for some reason show that intensly irritating "upgrade to Quicktime Pro" thing that I mostly get with quicktime plugins... unless apple descided that I don't need to see them anymore.... *says she hopefully*
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J'au-æmne Posted Mar 31, 2000
This morning it works in netscape too, I'd test in in IE but I don't think my mother would be best pleased with me running up the phonebill still more
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Irving Washington - Gone Writing Posted Mar 31, 2000
That's right, phone bills are by the minute, even for local calls in the UK... Any idea why that is?
~Irving, who has established topic drift
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J'au-æmne Posted Mar 31, 2000
I think that ours is billed by the second... with the condition that the minimum call price is 5p (last time I paid attention, there was $1.60 to £1.00 (ish)... I'm looking vaguely into second phonelines (so that I can internet in peace, this is a bad idea for our phonebill, however) and cable 'phone companies, with the added benefit that I may even be able to get my mum to subscribe to cable tv... unlikely, but worth a go, I think
Local daytime calls are too expensive.
Joanna
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Irving Washington - Gone Writing Posted Mar 31, 2000
Only mobile phones and pay phones have to pay for local calls here. I'm sorry your phone bill is so steep! Now, if $1.60 = £1.00, how many p's in a £?
~Irving
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J'au-æmne Posted Mar 31, 2000
100 we went decimal in the early '70s..... my mobile phone is 35p per min daytime, 5p evenings, 2p all weekend. But thats expensive because its prepay.... it would be cheaper if it was on a contract, but I'd then run the risk of getting into debt.... and spending my life on the phone...
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J'au-æmne Posted Apr 1, 2000
And you don't have to pay local calls at all? Apparently British Telecom, probably the biggest telecommunications company over here, its what was left over of the nationalised state run company, are planning to give us free local calls sometime because of fighting the competition in the communications market
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Irving Washington - Gone Writing Posted Apr 1, 2000
We might have to pay something just for the service of having a phone line hooked up to our house. A connection fee. But we don't pay by the call, or by the minute, or anything
There's a big deal going on over here because right now local phone calls are thought of as a "Natural Monopoly", meaning that one company can offer all the service in an area witout competition -- normally an illegal practice -- because it would be confusing to have phone lines from several different companies going into a neighborhood... messes of wires all over the place. Some people want to break up the monopoly, which would probably lower the connection fee, but would add the problems of the wires... and the Government does regulate Natural Monopolies by making sure that they aren't making us pay through the nose.
~Irving
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J'au-æmne Posted Apr 1, 2000
There are various groups providing telephone services... other companies offer cable telephone connection, and cable tvs with it.. but I'm not sure how it all works..... I don't pay too much attention, mostly.
Key: Complain about this post
- 1
- 2
erm
- 1: Jenny and Fred the cheese (Mar 29, 2000)
- 2: Irving Washington - Gone Writing (Mar 29, 2000)
- 3: Irving Washington - Gone Writing (Mar 29, 2000)
- 4: Irving Washington - Gone Writing (Mar 29, 2000)
- 5: J'au-æmne (Mar 30, 2000)
- 6: Irving Washington - Gone Writing (Mar 30, 2000)
- 7: J'au-æmne (Mar 30, 2000)
- 8: Irving Washington - Gone Writing (Mar 30, 2000)
- 9: J'au-æmne (Mar 30, 2000)
- 10: Irving Washington - Gone Writing (Mar 30, 2000)
- 11: J'au-æmne (Mar 31, 2000)
- 12: Irving Washington - Gone Writing (Mar 31, 2000)
- 13: J'au-æmne (Mar 31, 2000)
- 14: Irving Washington - Gone Writing (Mar 31, 2000)
- 15: J'au-æmne (Mar 31, 2000)
- 16: Irving Washington - Gone Writing (Apr 1, 2000)
- 17: J'au-æmne (Apr 1, 2000)
- 18: Irving Washington - Gone Writing (Apr 1, 2000)
- 19: J'au-æmne (Apr 1, 2000)
- 20: Irving Washington - Gone Writing (Apr 2, 2000)
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