The Diner Finder is the Internet's best source of real diner information.I just realized I never provided an update on my computer-lesson, as related last month right here in Mom ‘N Pop Culture.
I won’t rehash the details. You can find that a few entries down this blog, so to speak. Suffice it to say my misadventures trying to buy a computer from Sears ended up happily. Gary at Tech Direct in Johnston, RI, set me up with a computer he assembled himself that allowed me to continue using all the software and peripherals I’d been using for years but with higher speed and "enhanced internet capabilities." It’s got a floppy-drive so I can still refer to old articles and stories from time to time. I’m writing this on my faithful old Word Perfect program. I have my printer hooked up through a new-fangled port, the name of which I forgot because stuff like that just isn’t very important to me, and the scanner connected through the old style "parallel printer" port because sooner or later even that uninteresting title got through to my gray matter (See me in about five years for the name of that printer cable).
I even get to keep using my little sports-car mouse, even though it, too, plugs in like an ancient phone (one of which I also still use, as a matter of fact).
I also have a wire running about 40 feet through three rooms and behind my wife’s desk to the "wireless remote" that sits on it. I love the irony of that. Furthermore, Gary advised I avoid the wireless adaptors that previously drove me bonkers if I could, as a cable simply was more reliable. It has been.
No, I didn’t cut up the Sears card. I still like their tools and the store closest to where I work employs these old guys in the tool department who actually know what they’re talking about. Hey, it’s good to see they found work. And Sears gave me a full refund, no questions asked, it’s only fair to report. Of course, as I’d made a payment in the meantime, now they owe me money. Talk about good credit.
Hey! DSL! That was a quick five years!
Posted at 2010-03-09 01:11:28
I guess that to receive the business loans from banks you should have a good reason. However, one time I have received a term loan, because I wanted to buy a house.
Because of its current state of unfortunate affairs and its rich industrial and cultural history, we are in search of... Read more

Finally recharged, we had a few more items on the agenda: More beach, amusement park for Roadside Girl, dinner at... Read more

Sometimes you don’t know what happened to you until after it’s over. My recent breakfast visit to the Red... Read more

By Peter Genovese Rutgers University Press, Rutgers, 2003 $14.95, 225 pages, hardcover Genovese does it again. By combining his true reporter nature... Read more
We interviewed Mr. Ed from Mr. Ed's Elephant Museum in Orrtanna, Pennsylvania in May 2002. We hoped to put together... Read more

Taking the Family Roadside into the Catskills for some R&R reveals a sad diner situation and a café for the... Read more

Nearly restored, Grand Marias's tribute to one its own, William Donahey, creator of the Teenie Weenies. (Photo courtesy of the... Read more

Ollie's Trolley gets honorable mention after our whirlwind visit to Washington D.C. When my former employers at Ball Publishing owned Roadside... Read more

Nostalgia can take you back, but it can’t take you all the way back. Not in Salem, Illinois. They tore... Read more
Photos and Story by Dirk Burhans When trains made a station stop, hungry travelers were... Read more

Update: The Yankee Diner closed in the fall of 2010 and reopened in January, 2011 with new ownership. We understand... Read more

Story and Photos by Helen Anne Gately "You tryin' to stay out of trouble?," Scott greets Dan as he enters the... Read more

Best Breakfast Eats in Missouri by Ann M. Hazelwood Reedy Press, St. Louis, Missouri, $14.95 Ann M. Hazelwood is a show-me native... Read more

by Sarah Rolph Tilbury House Publishers, Gardiner, MaineSoft cover, 120 pages, $20.00 In A1 Diner, Sarah Rolph compiles the best recipes from... Read more

Explore the Philadelphia's Mayfair section back in 1997 and how the once-great Mayfair Diner helped to bring about a revival... Read more
Thom
Posted at 2010-03-11 17:41:59
Uh - I'm not quite sure how this is in response to my entry. Might you explain?
Reply to comment