"SteveB" <oldfart@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> "Joel" <Joel@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote
>
> >> Steve, who finds Google hard to use.
> >
> > May I suggest you to learn to take advantage of Google? or it's hard
> > because you never spent time to learn to take advantage of it, and
some of
> > us find easy after spending times learning how to use it.
>
> I had a traumatic brain injury nearly four years ago, and get lost and
> overloaded at times. I'm smart, but it doesn't stay with me for long.
I
> also find that there are so many hits you get that are only remotely
> associated with what you're actually looking for. And then there's all
the
> sifting through information. It's very difficult at times.
>
> Steve
Me?
- Twenty some years ago I got so many health problem that I had to retired
early in my late 40's. And it took me 4-5 years to be able to learn to
walk
again, and still depend on many medicines to stay alive these days. But
it
has been much better.
- During the illness, I have quite a bit of memory loss. PLUS English
isn't
my native language so it's a BONUS to my problem. But that doesn't give
me
any good excuse to continue to take advantage of Internet to learn from
millions of people around the world. And thing is getting even harder at
the age of 71... but I'm still not giving up learning.
- The links some of us have posted here once awhile would give you much
more
information than you would like to know, and it may take an average person
4-6 months worth of reading. And the benefit of reading thing you don't
look for is a bonus (at least to me), and that's one of many reasons why I
enjoy Google.
- Because most thing won't change overnight, so it's a good thing to read
the old questions already been answered (including some debates) without
having to ask the same question to get the same answer. This is the
reason
why I hardly ask any question, or because I always try to find the answer
first before asking the same quesion.


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