Select your best hookup:
Local
Gay
Asian
Latin
East Europe

free hookup sights

It is easy to hold track of potential partners with the Look Book, a list of who has liked you back. craigslist courtenay bc There have also been reports that the daters you ve apparently crossed paths with are hogwash. Users who have a handful of extra laugh lines and silver strands may perhaps locate kindred spirits on an app with far more folks in their demographic. morgan lee escort You uncover matches by filling out a profile and meeting up with someone who has comparable likes.

www skipthegames com

Regional police now have sophisticated tools that can download your location and browsing history, texts, contacts, and pictures to hold or share forever. tucson females Why really should anyone have to settle for somebody they do not discover eye catching? Why appear for a under typical lady (simply because if you look for below typical women then probabilities are you do not obtain them desirable)? The challenge with on line dating is that guys face so significantly rejection that they end up spamming random people hi and hey and in turn end up messaging these under typical women. Following COVID 19 hit, he transitioned to FaceTime dates only to be more cautious, video chatting with people today he met on dating websites. meet canadian women It did not give me the satisfaction or excitement I craved.

Home  Sign In  Search  Date Ideas  Join  Forums  Singles Groups  - 100% FREE Online Dating, Join Now!




5/9/2010 6:13:03 PM Poll on Operating Systems  

gogo2520
Wisconsin Dells, WI
age: 59


I use XP pro with all the service packs is the fastest, window 7 is rated at about the same speed as vista slow.

I tried various Linux flavors Red Hat, Unbuntu, BSD, Mandrake, my favorite but there still there not much better then win 98 except there free.
windows xp with Sun virtual box is the way to go.



[Edited 5/9/2010 6:14:31 PM ]

Meet singles at DateHookup.dating, we're 100% free! Join now!

DateHookup.dating - 100% Free Personals


5/9/2010 6:47:24 PM Poll on Operating Systems  
snooppermn
Young America, MN
age: 52


Hey Guys

I got into learning Linux with Gentoo, back in 2005.

Running dual XP sp3, Gentoo on my desktop box.
New Acer laptop came with win7 Home Premium, and I have to say its running pretty nice, I turn off all updates hate getting told what I'm supposed to do with my puter. I dual boot it also with Gentoo Linux. Gentoo is more of hands-on distro , but you learn your system. Saw someone mention not liking IE8 on Win7, well use Firefox. I keep Win around just because, why not.

5/9/2010 9:34:18 PM Poll on Operating Systems  

snowwy66
Over 1,000 Posts (1,046)
Salt Lake City, UT
age: 44


i'm having a hard time with firefox. EVERYONE has there own flavors. and firefox just isn't my flavor. i jsut don't like the way it works sometimes.

about the only thing i do like about it. is that it has the capabilities of doing FTP. with the addin's required. ie just don't like doing FTP.

5/14/2010 11:28:56 AM Poll on Operating Systems  
liberalextinct
Over 1,000 Posts (1,659)
Anderson, IN
age: 28


im linux only. windows is totally a POS.

5/14/2010 1:47:12 PM Poll on Operating Systems  
stxdixiechick
Atascosa, TX
age: 37


I just upgraded my machine from Win XP to Win7. I also have a couple of other machines that are linux only, but I'm impressed with Win7 Professional. Perhaps when the new wears off, I won't be so impressed, but for now, its really nice.

5/16/2010 3:32:06 PM Poll on Operating Systems  
iaminohio
Over 1,000 Posts (1,352)
Cleveland, OH
age: 59


Quote from liberalextinct:
im linux only. windows is totally a POS.


What a beautiful argument!

5/16/2010 4:45:05 PM Poll on Operating Systems  

defensorfortis
Hyde Park, NY
age: 24


Quote from aha2:
I've created a poll on which OS you are using here:

Forums: General Discussion: Which OS are you using?

Thanks for voting.


Windows 7 Professional 64BIT on my Toshiba Qosmio X305

Windows XP Home Edition 32BIT on my old 2000 HP Pavillion 775e cause let's face it... Its far to old to try and play around and upgrade is out of question now.

For the record Windows 7 > ALL for stability. I have been using it sense RC1 released and I will never go back to lolXP. XP is by far the least stable that i've noticed and less reliable compaired to Windows 7. Haven't ran into a problem and when I do it's because I have been messing with registry and settings myself which were self correctable problems.

Driver issues? NONE.
Stabiltiy Issues? NONE.

Sense install of Windows 7 I never had a problem where I have had to use system recovery or fully restore it unlike the multiple times I have encountered with my HP Desktop.



[Edited 5/16/2010 4:55:08 PM ]

5/17/2010 8:19:02 AM Poll on Operating Systems  

aha2
Zürich
Switzerland
age: 45


@stxdixiechick

Compared to the current Ubuntu:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_cFq2EZTwA&feature=related

Win7 looks out-of-date.


5/18/2010 9:37:06 PM Poll on Operating Systems  
iaminohio
Over 1,000 Posts (1,352)
Cleveland, OH
age: 59


Quote from defensorfortis:
Windows 7 Professional 64BIT on my Toshiba Qosmio X305

Windows XP Home Edition 32BIT on my old 2000 HP Pavillion 775e cause let's face it... Its far to old to try and play around and upgrade is out of question now.

For the record Windows 7 > ALL for stability. I have been using it sense RC1 released and I will never go back to lolXP. XP is by far the least stable that i've noticed and less reliable compaired to Windows 7. Haven't ran into a problem and when I do it's because I have been messing with registry and settings myself which were self correctable problems.

Driver issues? NONE.
Stabiltiy Issues? NONE.

Sense install of Windows 7 I never had a problem where I have had to use system recovery or fully restore it unlike the multiple times I have encountered with my HP Desktop.


Can you be more specific on stability? How does that work?
I still have XP on my old computer, and it works just fine. I have 3 antivirus/spyware programs on it, all FREE, and had no problems. I installed a printer on it without a CD, and it works like a clockwork. I also have LIP for the other languages on XP, whereas on Windows Vista and higher, you have to upgrade to Ultimate.
I've never had a 64-bit, but from what I've heard, not everything is compatible with it.


5/19/2010 8:26:08 PM Poll on Operating Systems  

tigger_bounce
Tempe, AZ
age: 35


Desktop is running on this hardware with Windows 7... runs well.. Using MS Security Essentials for AV (best free option, would go with Eset if I were paying). My laptop is a new Macbook Pro 13" with an SSD running the latest 10.6 OSX. I've got several windows server, windows 7 and Ubuntu virtual machines via VMWare. My server is Ubuntu 8.04 LTS (will go to 10.04 this fall) with other OSes via VMWare.

If you have relatively modern hardware (dual core) and >=2GB of ram with a dedicated video card Windows 7 is hard to beat on the desktop side. (Even against XP). It ran pretty well, better than XP and Ubuntu on my Atom netbook with 2GB of ram.

I tend to be pretty OS agnostic, and have run OSX, Ubuntu, Suse, Windows XP, Vista, Win7 all in the past 5 years as my main OS for at least 6 months each. They all have inherent strengths and weaknesses. Win7 is probably my current favorite. As to the not liking IE8 comment above, don't know why, it looks/feels about the same as IE7. Personally, I'm a Firefox guy, in fact most of my primary apps are cross platform (Firefox, Thunderbird, X-Chat, Pidgin, and VMWare) which makes it easy enough to switch OSes as I see fit. A lot of my work time is spent in Windows doing development/programming.

5/19/2010 8:33:40 PM Poll on Operating Systems  

tigger_bounce
Tempe, AZ
age: 35


Quote from iaminohio:
Can you be more specific on stability? How does that work?
I still have XP on my old computer, and it works just fine. I have 3 antivirus/spyware programs on it, all FREE, and had no problems. I installed a printer on it without a CD, and it works like a clockwork. I also have LIP for the other languages on XP, whereas on Windows Vista and higher, you have to upgrade to Ultimate.
I've never had a 64-bit, but from what I've heard, not everything is compatible with it.


Regarding stability, since around 2003 (SP1 for XP) I honestly haven't seen a non-hardware/driver related blue screen (kernel dump) in windows.

As to 3 Anti-malware programs, hopefully 1 AV and 2 antispyware? If you're using a free AV, you probably should be using the MS one, it's the best free option. Otherwise should spring for Eset's Nod32. If you're using AVG (bloated, slow, leaky, unreliable crap) or Avast (slightly better than AVG) you probably should swap out for the MS one. Ironically enough it's been a solid contender in that space.

Jumping back to the printer, if you let it update, it will add a ton of printer drivers in Win7, my old HP LJ4050 was supported with no pain at all (network based), detected fine.

As to the multi-language support, most people don't need it, if you're a student the educational pricing isn't too bad for Ultimate, I've got an MSDN account so run whatever version I like. As to 64-bit support, for Win7 it's no less supported than 32bit, for most things. For Vista and even more on XP-64 it was more of a crap-shoot.

Win7's Defender is much lighter, and the UAC stuff is much less annoying (I leave it on in Win7).