Originally posted by: Carbo
I just wanted to take a moment to say thank you to all the virgins who offered their parenting advice and tidbits.
Originally posted by: Carbo
I just wanted to take a moment to say thank you to all the virgins who offered their parenting advice and tidbits.
Originally posted by: Carbo
I just wanted to take a moment to say thank you to all the virgins who offered their parenting advice and tidbits.
Originally posted by: isekii
Originally posted by: Carbo
First, before this becomes a thread on parenting and that associated BS, thanks for the advice but let's keep it on track.
Jzero, Ctho, I've already edited the hosts file with the following:
127.0.0.1 www.aol.com
127.0.0.1 www.aim.com
127.0.0.1 www.aol.co.uk (this one because I see she was going this route to get to AOL).
But, despite this, she is still getting through.
If it helps, I'm on a cable modem, and I'm behind Netgear RT314 Gateway router.
why not just shut off internet access on that computer completely ?
and teach her a lesson ~
Originally posted by: FishTankX
You might be making a big mistake. Because you know she'll just get trilian or something. Or shift over to something else. Then you'll never know. Anyways, I wouldn't block AIM. What I would do is check which homework she's suposed to be doing, and then tell her she can get on AIM after she's done. And unplug the netcable (from the router, so she wont' just try and plug it back in on that end) until she does.
But I mean, blocking AIM whole sale is a bad thing. I mean, my mom did that once and it nearly killed the best relationship of my life. Nearly, I say.Discovered Trillian and all was good. And now I've got a new GF.
And I did get through higshcool, if anybody's wondering. I learned how to be careful and make sure that I got my homework done so that my mom would have nothing to get upset about.
but... doesnt trillian still connect to oscar.aol.com (or wtuever that aim server is on)...?
Then in September 1998, AIM released an new protocol for instant messaging along with a beta Linux client. This protocol was called TOC, was string based, and to many people's surprise, was released under the GNU General Public License. TOC is much easier to use and has allowed numerous Linux based clients to be written without the need of reverse engineering. TOC does not replace OSCAR, rather, TOC servers act as a proxies for OSCAR, making life for the clients much easier.
Originally posted by: johneetrash
or what happens when one of her nerdy friends is an ATOTer...


 
				
		