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Lurkers!!!!
Was it yesterday evening that I noticed there were 40 registered users viewing and 395 lurkers. Come on people, regsister and introduce yourselves. This site is a lot more fulfilling once you actually start interacting.
...and I'm gettnig tired of the regulars and want some new friends to play with |
Humph!!
How rude!! :) |
Well ok then,
Hi, I am a registered lurker, hoping to travel next year. Currently our flat is on the market to provide the capital... Dan |
Stepping forward
I Like it!
Waving Hello and advertising your flat in one line :) Welcome Dan :welcome: Happy travel prep |
Not necessarily lurking
On the road (currently La Paz, Bolivia), when I bring up the HU website from an internet cafe just to check postings in the past 24 hours, it would appear I would be amongst your lurkers. Well, I am lurking, so if there isn't anything new, anything we have to say, I don't log in.
So, perhaps instead of only 40 registered users and 395 lurkers (unregistered), there's like 100 of us regular, registerd users on the road popping into an internet cafe, too tired to log on, too busy checking our other email accounts and such. (probably not!) |
Quite right.......
........Quastdog, I've also just logged on to let you know that I do that as well; probably go back to Lurking now!!
Dave |
Vbulletin has lots of configurations...
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Doh!!
Just tried to reply on another computer and realized that I am not logged on!
But what I wanted to say is that I think you are going "Bossies" with so little time before you go!!! You dont need more people to talk to......you need to be on the road heading south. Must be soon now? 2.5 months for meeeee!! orrin |
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It's nice and handy for those of us who are logged in at home and work (cookies get stored on the pc on login), so we don't have log in each time (so we appear as logged in), but it ain't that simple when you're on the road, using a strange pc.. if you don't explicitly log in (and the last guy didn't stay logged in), you appear as a lurker by default. It springs to mind that some people might use the lurking thing in between sustaining multiple identities on the HUBB.. and then springs right out of mind again for legal reasons.. :wink3: |
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Those days are gone! Regards, Mick |
Since I often check for new posts whilst at work :innocent: (and my work PC is configured not to allow cookies), it means that every time I switch to the HUBB, I'm lurking, since I'm no longer logged in. In addition, when not logger in, there's this nice link "Today's Posts", which isn't present when logged in (Yes, I know you can retrieve posts by 8 hours, 24 hours etc.)
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Crickey...this has caused a reaction...not the kind I expected. Glad to see soo may old timers resurfacing. Yes I appreciate that I too will not log in every time I find a computer once we hit the road.
I have though noticed a recent marked increase in newcomers. Very refeshing!!! |
If you were able to check the IP addresses you would probably find that most of the 395 luckers were Google or Yahoo webbots indexing the site.
Tim |
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I came out of "lurk" mode - found a spot with wi-fi for my laptop. Now...back into the lurk! |
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(must be coz im a beemer rider, and not an XT660 rider) :oops2: |
posted by Nomadic1
<<(must be coz im a beemer rider, and not an XT660 rider)>> I thought everyone in Sheffield had swapped their BMWs for rowing boats after the floods............ |
I'm new too, and I don't know anyone (Sob! Sniffle!). Just traded in my VFR800 for a Wee-Strom! Travelled about in the UK but want to branch out abroad,where is a good place to cut my adventure teeth? Any suggestions welcome!
have fun! Tim xx |
Will save some aggro. Lots of info here on specifics.
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If you have never ridden in Scotland then you can count it as "abroad" and the roads are fabulous outside the big cities! After that, go to France - just down the road from you with lots of great routes available. Then branch out in whatever direction takes your fancy. :welcome: Dave |
How are you with languages?
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I consider myself good at picking up languages, but when I worked there for a year I learned only six things: Hello/goodbye; please/thank you; yes/no. This wasn't because the Dutch were rude, far from it, they were so polite that as soon as they heard my English accent they switched to English. I'm still embarassed that I learned so little when I should have done more. I promise to do better when I move there permenantly. |
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I can recommend two great books for you on your journey - they're Richard Dawkins" "The God Delusion", and Charles Darwin's "Origin of Species". |
Thanks for the advice! Just come back from 2 weeks in Scotland as it happens! It was that trip that prompted me to trade in the VFR, My back and wrists were crippled after a couple of 500 mile days! Can recommend the Red Squirrel campsite in Glencoe, and the Clachaig pub up the road for top food and quality ale. Also the Sligachan campsite on Skye.
Riding through France and down to Valencia in November for the GP, does that count as an adventure?:wink2: Tim x |
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Great choice that tour around Scotland and the Clachaig is a tremendous pub with a good night life (there used to be a youth hostel nearby with loads of visitors at this time of year, especially of the female type!?) - the pub used to have a hole in the wall and that was used to throw the empty bottles out the back (a new take on "re-cycling" - I guess that is not PC nowadays so it may have been blocked up). I've camped in the camp site at Invercoe on the loch side within walking distance of the Glencoe Hotel - don't remember what it was called though. Know what you mean about the VFR - the last time I was in Scotland it was on a Blackbird. So, it is France next as well - told you! BTW, for me, any bike ride is an adventure. :thumbup1: Cheers, |
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