Skip to main content

Microsoft inches towards keeping its promise!

Last year, Microsoft had sent me an email promising to increase my Hotmail email storage space from 2 mb to 250 mb by the end of August, 2005.
Microsoft seems keen on keeping its promise, sluggish though it may be. I was surprised to see the space augmented to 25 mb. This screenshot is the apple of my eye!

Comments

Sebastian said…
visit
http://sebastianjoseph.moved.in/wp
Sebastian said…
Hi Sittu

This comment was ment for Deepanjan. He had some inside info so the site would have made sense to him.

You could re visit the link and you would understand what the site is about.

Sebastian

PS Deepanjan sorry for making your comment section look like a BBS
Deepanjan said…
Blogger supports blogs that are hosted externally (somewhere else). Give it a try.
I hate to see you leave the Blogger fold.

Popular posts from this blog

This is what Bertrand Russell said about religion...

Religion is based, I think, primarily and mainly upon fear. It is partly the terror of the unknown and partly, as I have said, the wish to feel that you have a kind of elder brother who will stand by you in all your troubles and disputes. ... A good world needs knowledge, kindliness, and courage; it does not need a regretful hankering after the past or a fettering of the free intelligence by the words uttered long ago by ignorant men.

The year that was

I'm wearing a rather striking shirt, one that makes me feel like a clown fooling around in a graveyard. Roving eyes latch on to me and make me too conscious of myself. Checkered in red, grey, black and maroon, I've excused myself into donning it and looking silly for two reasons. It's Friday and…more importantly, the last working day of the year. Tailored half-a-year back, I never had the courage to wear it, not until today. It's that time of the year when it's time to reflect on the events that transpired. Last year ended on the worst possible note. Dad had expired and I was numb with shock. The repercussions rippled halfway thought this year. Things were so abysmal initially that I had lost the will to live. Acrid in everything I did, I was immensely angered by time phlegmatically flowing through its cadence. It was as if Dad meant nothing to anybody. What right did people have to live the way they always had when Dad was no more? Why was much of the world still