P
Paul
why do I always get the end-user license whenever I open Outlook 2003
Paul said:why do I always get the end-user license whenever I open Outlook 2003
Paul said:why do I always get the end-user license whenever I open Outlook 2003
VanguardLH said:Did you okay the validation for that license while logged on using a
Windows account that has admin-level permissions?
.
Running Windows 7 (new computer) I am the admin-level login. Thank you
VanguardLH said:Arthur wrote:
<snipped his attempt to hijack Paul's thread>
Do not hijack someone else's thread. Start your own for YOUR problem.
.
Arthur said:Arthur wrote
This is my thread. Read the darn thing. No one answered but asked further
questions that I answered
VanguardLH said:Paul started this thread, not you (Arthur). If you (as Arthur
purporting to be Paul) like to nymshift then you put yourself in the
same category of posters as are malcontents, spammers, and trolls. If
you want to present yourself in a newsgroup, pick one identity and stick
with it. This is how you are identified. While sometimes the headers,
like NNTP-Posting-Host, can be interrogated to check from where a post
originates (to unmask nymshifters), Microsoft's webnews-for-dummies
interface to Usenet does not insert unique info to identify a poster.
So you changing your nym (which what Arthure is claiming here) which
means you are presenting yourself as a completely different person.
Don't nymshift if you want to be seen as the same poster. If Arthur
isn't Paul then Arthur did hijack Paul's post. If Paul became Arthur
then you are a nymshifter. If you want to present multiple personas
then you will get treated based on that trollish behavior.
If Paul had returned to this thread then I would continue the discussion
with Paul in *Paul's* thread. I don't converse with posters that are
afflicted with dissociative identity disorder.
This is my thread.