|  | Posted by Bill Vermillion on 10/23/05 14:45 
In article <evbll1tm199hm2q50qcelmbbnn5oc8io7s@4ax.com>,Bill G  <niobrara969@none.invalid> wrote:
 >On Sat, 22 Oct 2005 21:05:01 GMT, bv@wjv.com (Bill Vermillion) wrote:
 >
 >>The list price of the ST-150 probably scares many off, but I found
 >>a place that sold it for $419 - shipping included.  Their sites
 >>says they will ship within 48 hours.  I checked and my order was
 >>picked up by UPS about 4 hours after I placed it, and got to me
 >>2 days early.  So good price and fast service is hard to find.
 >>
 >>If you [or anyone else] wants the name of the place you can send me
 >>email - as I don't like to post commercial things on Usenet -
 >>having that inbred into my motions here since I got on the 'net
 >>in about 1984. [My address has been 'real' since I got on the 'net
 >>and with proper filters spams is not a problme. [Unix systems and
 >>my own mail server]
 >
 >About the only time it's unacceptable to post a commercial reference
 >is when someone is hawking their own site. If you've found a place
 >that offers quality goods, at a fair price, and treats the customer
 >well, I don't know why you'd hesitate to share that info. Big thumbs
 >down to the group of folks who "trained" you back in 1984. :)
 
 In those days much transport was on Arpa net and since a lot was
 government funded - I remember a lot of posts going through
 'seismo' - there was to be NO commercial annoucment or appearances
 thereof.
 
 And since anything on the 'net lives forever - I can find posts of
 mine from the late 1980's - nothing is more frustrating than
 an http link on information that no longer exists.  I'd just as
 soon have real information.
 
 And though a vendor may be good today, there is no indication they
 will be a year from now - and I'd hate to have people browing old
 posts and getting ripped off if the vendor had changed - and blame
 me for that.
 
 I often get mail from things I've posted years ago.
 
 And no one 'trained' me.  It was reading the Netiquette, reading
 the dos/don'ts and learning how to program serial ports to talk
 with modems and then setting up UUCP for connection to other sites
 via telephone.  My old site in 1986/7 was usually in the top-500
 of usenet transport sites.  All on two high-speed modems [ getting
 about 19K throughput before the rest of the world had 9600 working
 properly] and keeping both phone lines running almost coninually.
 
 Bill
 
 --
 Bill Vermillion - bv @ wjv . com
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