Is TiVO the way to go?
Is the sky blue? Is water wet?
Once Setup is done, it wuuuuuvs broadband.
This is true. I wish they'd upgrade it so it didn't need that one phone call, though.
Giles ,'Same Time, Same Place'
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Is TiVO the way to go?
Is the sky blue? Is water wet?
Once Setup is done, it wuuuuuvs broadband.
This is true. I wish they'd upgrade it so it didn't need that one phone call, though.
It doesn't! There's a secret code that you can press in that will make it do the initial set-up through the wireless connection. It took some fiddling, but it worked.
Of course, if it can do it, why the fuck they make it so hard to figure out is a mystery.
eta
The TiVO specs suggest a land line is absolutely imperative for the very first hookup call.
Not so. Trikssy Tivo, we hates...ok, not really possible to hate Tivo. I can dig the Super Seekrit instructions up for you if you decide to take the plunge, StuntHusband.
It doesn't! There's a secret code that you can press in that will make it do the initial set-up through the wireless connection.
Consarnit! Oh well, it's too late for me now. And by the next time I move, we'll probably have eliminated the need for wires altogether, and be recieving television shows and phone calls through the implants in our brains.
Braaaaaaaiiiiiiiiiiiins.
Brenda, I could use the super Seekrit instructions, since I will need to set up my Tivo again soon.
Also, hi all!
I think the coolest bit of public behavior-management parenting I ever saw was once, in Target, when a little kid just had a full-on, fists-against-the-floor meltdown in the middle of one of the aisles, for reasons I couldn't possibly ascertain. Nothing Mom could have said would have stopped that. As soon as it was clear that the child couldn't be placated, Mom just left her cart right where it was, still full of the stuff she intended to buy, picked up said kid, and headed for the nearest exit.
This. This is what my mom would have done. And did with any of us.
It worked.
I am madly in love with Jessica. That is all.
psst I would like to hear more about the brain implants.
Mom just left her cart right where it was, still full of the stuff she intended to buy, picked up said kid, and headed for the nearest exit.
I have never seen a parent do this, though I've heard thousands of "If you don't shut up we're leaving" threats. (Possibly gratuitous Mormon ranting) I can't imagine how the girl-women I see around here who have three small kids before they're twenty-five cope with those children's needs. The moms are barely grown-up themselves, and they're trying to have children, tend a marriage, keep the household going, and maybe maybe look to their own education.
No wonder they say they'll get their rewards in Heaven, it'll be the only time they get any sleep.
I have never seen a parent do this, though I've heard thousands of "If you don't shut up we're leaving" threats.
My mom never threatened; she promised. If we acted up, she delivered us to the car, and home.
there were a couple of leaveing incidents in my childhood
I've done it. I always felt so sorry for StE. StY was ADHD, and he was wired wide open, all the time, until he crashed, which he did, hard. I yammered at him constantly. Because he had no internal governor, I had to be that for him. And because it took him a very long time to link cause and effect, he was forever having it demonstrated.
Meanwhile, StE, standing right there, getting the byblow of all this, did his utmost to be a perfect kid, and got a small proportion of my attention. His achievements didn't get the enthusiastic response we should have given them, because a) we couldn't focus on him long enough, and b) the underachiever would have felt even worse if we'd made a big deal over the overachiever.
And of course it didn't matter if StE behaved perfectly, if StY had a meltdown in the grocery store, StE got punished for it by not getting to go to McDonald's, after. Parents cannot win. Neither can "the good child."