Justin's Profile

Member since February 13, 2012

  • Name

    Justin Jenkins

  • Location:

    United States of America

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Recent Posts

  1. Review - AntiPop!

    1.0 (Oct 28, 2002)

    I don't mean to be really negitive, but I uninstalled this program about a min. after installing it. as soon as I tried to "open document in new window" from my web brower, it blocked it! But worse yet there was setting to change this! I would think with a download size of over 2 mb, there would be more options.

  2. Review - Mozilla for Windows

    M15 (Apr 19, 2000)

    Wow ... WOW ... this is A LOT better, fast on loading pages...fast loading up mozilla ... does not take up all my RAM like PR1 did... and style sheets work great ... very nice. This may give IE a run for its money after all.

  3. Review - FreeBSD

    4.0 (Mar 22, 2000)

    It works fine...i just downloaded it.

  4. Comment - Microsoft Accounting App Hits 1 Million Downloads

    4.0 (Feb 20, 2007 - 6:31 PM)

    First off what “laws” are you talking about? “Dumping” has to do with different countries “selling a product in a foreign country for less than either (a) the price in the domestic country, or (b) the cost of making the product.”

    Its “illegal” for certain items which the receiving country wants to regulate to “protect” its domestic interests --- it’s nothing like software development.

    Let’s be realistic here, this doesn’t really apply to software. Microsoft did this with IE and it spurred a lot of innovation and can you imagine having to BUY a browser now? Like you use to have to with Netscape?

    Mozilla is free, Linux is free, MySQL is free, why aren’t they dumping too? It’s simple --- software usually isn’t about the product --- you generally make it once and then it costs little to nothing after that point.

    As Debian Linux puts it in their FAQ ...

    “Most software costs over 100 US dollars. How can you give it away? A better question is how do software companies get away with charging so much? Software is not like making a car. Once you've made one copy of your software, the production costs to make a million more are tiny (there's a good reason Microsoft has so many billions in the bank).”

  5. Comment - Yahoo Raising Subscription Music Price

    4.0 (Oct 21, 2005 - 8:10 PM)

    Zing!

  6. Comment - IIS 7.0 Learns a Few Tricks from Apache

    4.0 (Sep 16, 2005 - 9:01 PM)

    Uhm I'm not gonna sit here posting about 'I'm so cool I use linux!!!' blah blah when most of the people that comment that most likely have a windows 98 box ... but anyhow ... IE has the 90% *NOT* ISS.

  7. Comment - Windows Update 5 Prepped for XP SP2, New IE

    4.0 (Nov 10, 2003 - 4:48 PM)

    Then perhaps you should just have multiply windows open, tabs are designed for uses which call for less clutter and the like. For example, when searching Google for something I often like to open different results into tabs in the background, then go through quickly and see what's useful, and what not. Tabs work great for that, it's just an option, not a requirement, if it's not useful for you ... don't use it. I personally really like Firebird because it's lean and fast, has popup blocking and tabs ... I use Linux at home, and Windows at work and I love having the same browser both places. I do however wish Firebird had a better Google bar, I know there is a small built-in one, and there is an extension, but I don't like it as much as the IE one that Google makes.

  8. Comment - Photo Gallery: XP Launch Event

    4.0 (Oct 29, 2001 - 12:12 AM)

    That is ... just ... come on ... of course it is if you format to a floppy but type cmd and then ver in windows and it says it's XP. as it should.