Tired of getting too many unwanted AOL trial cds?
"Two Californians, John Lieberman and Jim McKenna, have decided that they are tired of receiving unsolicited AOL CDs and have created a website called http://www.nomoreaolcds.com. The two are collecting AOL CDs and the website invites others to send them their unwanted CDs. When they have received one million discs they will drive them to AOL’s head office in Virginia and drop them off. To date they have received 103,989 from as far as Germany, the United Kingdom, Australia and France."
Actually I don't mind AOL per se. I've used them for years since I moved back home. My complaint is every time they upgrade their software, the required amount of hard drive space doubles. I haven't upgraded in awhile as a consequence, lacking all those "nifty" features simply because it'd slow my poor 'puter to a screeching halt.
"Two Californians, John Lieberman and Jim McKenna, have decided that they are tired of receiving unsolicited AOL CDs and have created a website called http://www.nomoreaolcds.com. The two are collecting AOL CDs and the website invites others to send them their unwanted CDs. When they have received one million discs they will drive them to AOL’s head office in Virginia and drop them off. To date they have received 103,989 from as far as Germany, the United Kingdom, Australia and France."
Actually I don't mind AOL per se. I've used them for years since I moved back home. My complaint is every time they upgrade their software, the required amount of hard drive space doubles. I haven't upgraded in awhile as a consequence, lacking all those "nifty" features simply because it'd slow my poor 'puter to a screeching halt.