AmberCutie's Forum
An adult community for cam models and members to discuss all the things!

Girlfriend software

  • ** WARNING - ACF CONTAINS ADULT CONTENT **
    Only persons aged 18 or over may read or post to the forums, without regard to whether an adult actually owns the registration or parental/guardian permission. AmberCutie's Forum (ACF) is for use by adults only and contains adult content. By continuing to use this site you are confirming that you are at least 18 years of age.
Status
Not open for further replies.

Jupiter551

V.I.P. AmberLander
Feb 2, 2011
8,897
9,855
211
Found this joke posted on another forum...I think it's worth reposting :mrgreen:


I am currently running the latest version of GirlFriend and I've been
having some problems lately. I've been running the same version of
DrinkingBuddies 1.0 forever as my primary application, and all the
GirlFriend releases I've tried have always conflicted with it. I hear
that DrinkingBuddies won't crash if GirlFriend is run in background mode
and the sound is turned off. But I'm embarrassed to say I can't find
the switch to turn the sound off. I just run them separately, and it
works okay.

Girlfriend also seems to have a problem co-existing with my Fishing 97
program, often trying to abort Fishing 97 with some sort of timing
incompatibility. I probably should have stayed with GirlFriend 1.0, but
I thought I might see better performance from GirlFriend 2.0. After
months of conflicts and other problems, I consulted a friend who has had
experience with GirlFriend 2.0. He said I probably didn't have enough
cache to run GirlFriend 2.0, and eventually it would require a Token
Ring to run properly. He was right - as soon as I purged my cache, it
uninstalled itself.

Shortly after that, I installed GirlFriend 3.0 beta. All the bugs were
supposed to be gone, but the first time I used it, it gave me a virus
anyway. I had to clean out my whole system and shut down for a while. I
very cautiously upgraded to GirlFriend 4.0. This time I used a SCSI
probe first and also installed a virus protection program. It worked
okay for a while until I discovered that GirlFriend 1.0 was still in my
system. I tried running GirlFriend 1.0 again with GirlFriend 4.0 still
installed, but GirlFriend 4.0 has a feature I didn't know about that
automatically senses the presence of any other version of GirlFriend and
communicates with it in some way, which results in the immediate removal
of both versions.

The version I have now works pretty well, but there are still some
problems. Like all versions of GirlFriend, it is written in some obscure
language I can't understand, much less reprogram. Frankly I think there
is too much attention paid to the look and feel rather than the desired
functionality. Also, to get the best connections with your hardware,
you usually have to use gold-plated contacts. And I've never liked how
GirlFriend is totally "object-oriented."

A year ago, a friend of mine upgraded his version of GirlFriend to
GirlFriendPlus 1.0, which is a Terminate and Stay Resident version of
GirlFriend. He discovered that GirlFriendPlus 1.0 expires within a year
if you don't upgrade to Fiancee 1.0. So he did, but soon after that, he
had to upgrade to Wife 1.0 which he describes as a huge resource hog.
It has taken up all his space, so he can't load anything else. One of
the primary reasons he decided to go with Wife 1.0 was because it came
bundled with FreeSexPlus. Well, it turns out the resource allocation
module of Wife 1.0 sometimes prohibits access to FreeSexPlus,
particularly the new Plug-Ins he wanted to try. On top of that, Wife
1.0 must be running on a well warmed-up system before he can do
anything. Although he did not ask for it, Wife 1.0 came with
MotherInLaw which has an automatic pop-up feature he can't turn off. I
told him to try installing Mistress 1.0, but he said he heard if you try
to run it without first uninstalling Wife 1.0, Wife 1.0 will delete
MSMoney files before doing the uninstall itself. Then Mistress 1.0
won't install anyway because of insufficient resources.
 
It is a great classic! Thanks for reminding!

I feel old to know what token rings are... :faroah:
 
Jupiter551 said:
... [GirlFriend 4.0] worked
okay for a while until I discovered that GirlFriend 1.0 was still in my
system. I tried running GirlFriend 1.0 again with GirlFriend 4.0 still
installed, but GirlFriend 4.0 has a feature I didn't know about that
automatically senses the presence of any other version of GirlFriend and
communicates with it in some way, which results in the immediate removal
of both versions. ...
Oh so true :lol:, at the risk of over-extending the metaphor even further, I may have found an advisory on that issue.

GirlFriend 1.0 is cannot be fully uninstalled unless its own unique values are removed from the registry. Unless opened in Safe Mode, any attempt to open it up again may cause it to broadcast its presence, usually via networking resources. Otherwise it triggers GirlFriend 4.0's advanced security features. Those weren't part of Girlfriend 1.0, leading some advanced users to prefer the older version for it's ease of use and absence of many compatibility issues.

In the default installation, later versions of GirlFriend run periodic scans of all networking resources for other versions of GirlFriend and to monitor the resource usage of applications like DrinkingBuddies 1.0. The presence of GirlFreind 1.0, or even a single reference to the previous version, can trigger the dual uninstall issue reported.

The most damaging conflict can arise if later versions of GirlFriend detect unlicensed versions of Fiancee 1.0 or Wife 1.0. Those must be added to Girlfriends' safe programs list by the user when scanning versions of Girlfriend are installed, or manually excluded from subsequent scans by manually shutting down network resources. Most users find this inconvenient as it prevents access to many of the advanced features offered by other applications.

If they're not on Girlfriends safe list or manually excluded, both may remain resident requiring ever increasing processing resources, leading to a hardware failure when the Central Processing Unit (CPU) burns out.
 
harry said:
From the The Onion a few years ago, at the hight of the credit crisis:

hahah yes I remember that one!

The one about hiding the nation's porn under a mountain in boxes marked "Canada" so that future civilizations won't judge the US on its porn, is also a classic - hell pretty much every onion video is a classic
 
helen-keller-was-just-thirsty.png
 
Status
Not open for further replies.