ISP Information:
A standard introduced by Microsoft with Windows 95 that allowed users to break from the file naming conventions of DOS. DOS only allowed filenames of eight letters then a period then three more letters. Almost all other file systems allow for longer names. They can be 255 characters long, containing spaces or even periods. Besides the 255 character limit the only real restriction is that none of the following characters ISP Glossary:
LFN - "Nonymous" wrote in messagenews:euednaFcw81uILLcRVn-gQ@giganews.com... "Kent Wills" wrote in message news:2p9sl6FighpaU1@uni-berlin.de... "www.yardsalequeen.com" wrote in message news:bfaeeda7.0408271440.177362bd@posting.google.com... Was having lunch the other day at a local Chick-fil-a and was surprised to see that they served a man who no shirt on and then went and ate his lunch in a booth. I mean, I always thought the "No Shirt, No Shoes, No Services" was implied in restaurants even though there wasn't a sign. I asked at the counter - and they said they had a lot of construction workers who come in. Sheesh - I'd especially want constructions workers wearing a shirt - and not smearing their sweaty back all over the booth. I called their headquarters to find out their policy, and they said they didn't have one. So is it me, or am I being too picky? Legally, restaurants can server or refuse service to anyone they wish (so long as the refusal isn't based on a protected minority). If they wish to risk offending, and possibly losing, customers by allowing people without shirt in, they can. I'd like to see a 'no children on the counter' policy. I'm sick and tired of parents who are carrying young children sit the child on the counter by the register while they place their order. That counter is for serving *food*. I don't need your kids stinky ass sliding and farting all over where my food will be when I'm next up at the register.I don't eat in place like those you just described. Why do you?
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