Star Wars tazos
Well I have finally finished my collection and have loads of extras in my store. So if you’re interested and need one. Please do, http://www.govvy.co.uk/retroking/index.php?act=viewCat&catId=12
Well I have finally finished my collection and have loads of extras in my store. So if you’re interested and need one. Please do, http://www.govvy.co.uk/retroking/index.php?act=viewCat&catId=12
The body of the email contains:
On Internet forums there appeared messages of a powerful explosion at a United Kingdom nuclear power station located in the suburbs of London..
According to witnesses’ statements the explosion happened at about 3 pm on the 9th of September.
In particular, one resident of this town has made a call and had time to inform her relatives that connection in the town was being cut off in order not to let people phone somebody.
She insists that the explosion really took place at the nuclear power station, and that it was a really powerful one, and now the radiation cloud is moving.
This information is being unofficially confirmed in public agents’ private conversations.
Besides, local residents place pictures of the explosion consequences and victims’ bodies in their blogs.
The photo’s attached to this email!
Send this email to your friends!
And the attachment is a WIN32:Trojan-Gen virus, so don’t open it!
The style in which Google publicized their new browser seemed to be quite clever as they had all the major news networks talking about it. So a beta release is upon us and the new internet browser is called Chrome.
There are very few details that are different between Chrome and the major contenders of Internet Explorer and Firefox. But of what little there is, there are certainly some adaptations which are rather nice.
After all it is only a browser window, but I do rather like the thumbnail websites you see on load-up. That is a nice way to select the websites you use most as it will order by how much you use that website. Setting up desktop items which load what pages you like… well that just clutter in the end.
Search strings in the url bar was always a feature in a way, it would just use different search engines per browser.
But the best feature and one which beats IE and Firefox has to when the browsers crash. The tabs and all browser windows will be closed from a crash with IE and Firefox. (Firefox will at least remember where you have been visiting.) A new feature devolved into Chrome has this problem fixed. Because of the architecture created, Chrome runs each tab and each window like its own program and there-for avoids having to restart the whole lot. The added feature of the task manager gives you that extra power to deal with the crashes and fix problems.
Another feature which I can only assume is for people that look up porn and other dodgy stuff is the Incognito mode. That is where the window will not log the pages you view into the history, download cookies or do other bad stuff.
I still think Firefox runs better and feels less than a resource hog. But Chrome is in the early stages and may certainly take a while to get in gear with the internet crowd. For others this is just a wag of the tail. To me it is a long way off from being a contender and I will stick with the trusty Fox.
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