NEW: Galt's Gulch Members Directory PUBLIC BETA
With nearly 20,000 members, Galt’s Gulch is becoming a big place! To make it even easier to connect with like-minded individuals, we’re publicly unveiling the new Galt's Gulch Members Directory.
Using the Members Directory you can find Gulch members near you, start local group discussions, or schedule times to get together and hang out in person.
Check it out now: http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/members
This is a PUBLIC BETA. Test it out and let us know what you think in the comments below.
Using the Members Directory you can find Gulch members near you, start local group discussions, or schedule times to get together and hang out in person.
Check it out now: http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/members
This is a PUBLIC BETA. Test it out and let us know what you think in the comments below.
I 'started with computers' around 1967 on an IBM 360/45 at RPI and had to drill down to pseudo-assembly language to debug some otherwise-trivial programming problems. One of my close friends found a bug in IBM's compiler. :)
After that, 'out in the world,' I went from teletype-driven time sharing, where I was doing distribution graphs and intersections of them using the little X's to plot them out.
Then came a Calcomp plotter hooked to a 16-bit mini from HP and then HP x-y plotters driven by cpus with core memory (the little metal donut kind!)
Some years later, after BASIC on an HP 'calculator,' I learned DOS from the machine language up so I've cut my teeth on MS products since then and familiarity can breed contempt as well as... familiarity.
But I was also a Chevy Man until GM drove me away into the arms of Toyota.
MS has been a thorn in my side for years, but I'm also familiar with a lot of its shortcomings and have some MS-expert friends to bail me out when the software gets deeper than I'm tall.
Most recently I've discovered that Wells-Fargo and MS IE8 do not get along well, and between W/F and MS, the workaround has been Chrome.
But again, it's another learning curve that I'm just not eager to climb right now. We'll see what happens in the future, but late this year I turn 70, and there's the old story about old dogs and tricks... I've learned a lot of new tricks in my life, but at some point a nice nap is more rewarding.
:)))))))))))))
There's a bit of a pause, but now the 'cards' become visible without having to mouse-over.
cheers and Congrats! Good job!
I agree with the need for members not in the ZIP code system to have a way of being in the database.
I would like to see other things in the results, if approved by each member: (1) whether the person considers himself an objectivist or not, (2) age, (3) sex, (4) marital status, (5) availability (looking for ...), (6) email address, just to name a few that come to mind.
Free Linux distros come with very good software and accomplish most everything well in similar ways -- the only exceptions I've run into is poorer CAD and more difficult graphics apps, so Linux has Wine to run those M$-type apps.
And then Firefox is drastically better than IE. So that's my happy choice.
But this is WAY off-subject!
2. Yes, one could figure out what zip codes to put in to expand the search beyond 100 miles, and make a few messages. However, one would rather have the computer the yeoman's work.
3. Didn't try to send a message yet.
Everyone discriminates on something, and usually on many things.
Good catch. Looking into it now. Thanks plusaf.
We'll look into it. But... in the meantime, you may want to try and operating system and browser combo used here on Earth.
Just kidding. But not really. ;)
Next, "Next" at the bottom of the page should probably have another copy near the top of the page for navigation, AND the proverbial "this is page x of N pages" with the option of going directly to page Z would probably help, too.
"Next" isn't fun if you don't know whether there are three or three hundred pages behind the one you're viewing...
:)
It still does not work for me. I have updated my profile a couple of times, entering the same information. The search does not find me. It does return people I know from the area.
I tried it on a Mac with Safari; then went to Chrome on the Mac.
What he insisted on was not letting the enemy (system) have the fruits of his mind. In other words, no creative job unless it's within the Gulch.
Jan
Probably way better, ‘tho it DOES contribute to the problem of the myth that we need the State … and principle of the less onerous tax is the same as the more onerous one … they’re all theft.
And yes, not only is the “progressive Income Tax a penalty on productivity that penalizes the more productive more stiffly”, it’s also a massive invasion of privacy in which the State thugs demand information from us subjects that we wouldn’t share with our closest friends.
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