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The intermediary device between a computer and a printer. In the old days, if you had no spooler your computer would wait as the printer slowly printed a document. You would send your print data to a spooler to accept the data and save it temporarily to hard disk or memory while it dealt with the slow printer for you. Nowadays print-server is a more current term for describing this type of device. Most modern operating s ISP Glossary:
Spooler - On Mon, 19 Jul 2004 23:57:44 GMT, Albee Kuminova <"AlbeeKuminova"@yawwhoo.com> wrote:No mortage. No credit card debt. Have enough money for final expenses.State Farm says after 62 I will need to put 800 to 1,000 a year in tofund the ins. vs. the 375 a year now. At what point is it a good idea todrop life ins.? Years back 50K in insurance seemed like a good idea. NowI wonder what to do. That's a lot of extra money considering I have along term nursing home/in home care policy which is over 2,500 a year.But term ins. or a "final expense" policy would be MUCH more. The 50K ison me or my wife. But she has 41K life insurance as long as she works.When she retires she would have a fair retirement and we'd botheventually have soc. security.So it's keep the universal life until 62 and pay $375 a year at whichtime the policy would lapse OR keep it in effect at $800 a year. Itseems logical to me to cancel it. Any thoughts? I'll meet with agentthis week and I know he will want me to pour more money into it.Since only Jim answered and even though I gave up on lifeinsurance (term) at age fifty, here's my two cents worth. Go tothe nearest social security office and determine what your wife'spayments will be if you die between 62 and 65. Then decide ifshe will need more. Include the 800 savings. After 65 I doubtthat there's a case for term insurance, but you'll have thenumbers to decide.Glenn.Pooler@att.netRochester Minnesota USA
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