Gallatin River No Limits Broadband Package Includes UNLIMITED Long Distance
Breaking The Chain - On E-mail Chain Letters
What Are Those Empty Boxes With Red X's?
Over 5 Million Spam and Virus Infected E-mails Blocked In December
Great Sites To Check Out This Month
Short Tutorial - Making gallatinriver.net Your Start Page
With our new No Limits Broadband package, you get:
All together for one great low price, all on one convenient bill, all from one local company you know and trust. Call us today for all the details – because the offer is – as much as we're hate to say it – limited.
Gallatin River Communications
www.gallatinriver.com
800-223-1851
Offer requires one-year service agreement. Broadband available in most
areas. Unlimited long distance calling for residential
direct-dial voice service only. See additional usage conditions
online at www.gallatinriver.com.
Federal Subscriber Line Charge included in your Residential Access Line
cost of $20.63. Other regulatory fees, taxes, surcharges and
Local Measured Service not included.
Everybody's received them before--chain letters or e-mail messages that promise you a big return for just a small investment. The problem is that not only will you receive little or no money on your "investment," but it is against the law to send or participate in a chain letter scheme. Here's how e-mail chain letter programs work:
The most common type of chain letter sent by e-mail instructs the recipient to send a small amount of money ($5 is the norm) to the person at the top of a list of ten people. The recipient is then instructed to remove the top name from the e-mail list contained within the e-mail message and forward the e-mail to ten of their friends. The theory is that by the time the recipient's name gets to the top of the list, he/she will receive $5 bills from thousands of chain letter participants. Of course, many times the letter includes a strong warning not to "break the chain" or something bad will happen to the recipient. Also included in the message is a promise of riches within 90 days or so. Yeah right!
Some things to remember about e-mail chain letters:
If you've been the target of a chain letter sent via e-mail, forward the e-mail message to the Federal Trade Commission at uce@ftc.gov. Break the chain. Do not participate in e-mail chain letters.
Question: Why do I sometimes receive e-mail messages that contain empty boxes with red "X's" within the message pane rather than pictures? My friends say the same thing happens to them.
Answer: Graphics and photos contained within an e-mail message are often times not really "stored" within the e-mail message itself but rather on a remote Web server (computer). If the message you receive is in an HTML format (supposed to have graphics or photos as part of the message) and a little box with a red "X" shows up instead of the image, there has probably been a broken connection somewhere between the image link within the e-mail message and the remote Web server where the image is actually stored.
Causes for a broken path between a graphic and a Web server can be as simple as a typo by the person who keyed in the web address of the image's server. When this occurs, the request for the image goes to a server location where no image exists. It is similar to looking for a business at 123 North Main Street when the correct address is 123 South Main Street. The result is the appearance of a little box with a red "X" within the message pane indicating an error message has occurred.
Another possible cause for a broken connection could be due to a power outage somewhere between your computer and the location of the image's Web server.
Additionally, if you are in the habit of downloading your e-mail messages and then closing your Internet connection to review your messages, the same problem will occur. If images within any of your incoming e-mail messages are stored at a remote server location, your computer will not be able to access them as you are no longer connected to the Internet. Again, a little box with a red "X" will indicate an error.
Note: Different e-mail clients and Web browsers use different symbols for a broken graphic link. For instance, Apple's Safari Web browser uses a blue box with a question mark symbol.
Our filters are busy rejecting unsolicited bulk email and virus-infected email sent to your Gallatin River Communications email address. During the month of December, 2003 our filters rejected over our filters rejected over 5 million spam and virus infected emails. The Gallatin River Communciations web portal page www.gallatinriver.net shows how many virus infections and spam messages we have blocked this month for all of our customers. It is updated every four hours.
Thank you for choosing Gallatin River Communications for your communications services. We are committed to providing the best possible services to all of our valued customers.
Choosing A Diet
That's Right For You
http://ivillage.com/diet - It's that time of the year where people go on a
diet to lose those few extra pounds that they put on over the holidays. There
are so many diets to choose from--so which one to try? This site provides
details on over 30 diets. Diets include Victoria Principal's 7-Day Bikini Diet,
the South Beach Diet, the Atkins Diet, the Sweet Tooth's Diet, the New Beverly
Hills Diet and more. (There's even a Peanut Butter Diet and an Ice Cream Diet.
Now those sound like my kind of diets!) Of course, consult your physician before
starting a weight loss program to make sure it's a safe one for you.
Usually when you update to a newer version of a Web browser, the browser overrides the web page you previously had set up as your s tart page. (Your start page is the first web page that appears each time you go online.) Most users want to utilize their Internet Service Provider's homepage as their start page so they can keep posted on any scheduled maintenance periods for service upgrades, important virus or hoax bulletins, etc. If your start page has been switched from your previous default start page, here's how to get your start page back to showing our homepage as your start page:
When Using Microsoft Internet Explorer 6 Browser Software and Windows XP:
We hope you found this newsletter to be informative. It's our way of keeping you posted on some of the latest happenings. If, however, you'd prefer not to receive these bulletins on a monthly basis, send us an e-mail at and type REMOVE in the subject line.
Thanks for your business!
Gallatin River Internet