I went to the Greenmarket at lunch and got cherries (umm, I love cherries), strawberries, boston lettuce, cherry tomatoes (another favorite, I can eat them by the handsful), Empire apples, hamentaschen, rugelach, a spinach quiche, a whole wheat mushroom focaccia and a whole wheat eggplant stromboli. For lunch I had half the stromboli and cherry tomatoes with a glass of V-8. I'm satisfied.
Jennifer, clicking any link in one of those e-mails is so
NOT[/u][/i] the thing to do! You could be taken to any Web site in the world with the worst kind of spyware and adware that could shut down your computer. If you're not using a good firewall and a virus protection program your computer is open to serious trouble. Even with a firewall and virus protection and an ad blocking program running, something might slip through. It's not remotely worth the chance that you could screw up your computer just to see a "spoofed" Web page. You should
NEVER, EVER, EVER click one of those links. Even if your computer doesn't get hit with something, as others have mentioned, you could get all sorts of cookies which while, perhaps, not harmful, per se, can track your surfing and deliver all sorts of unwanted ads or spam e-mail. If you don't clean out your cookie file then your computer just fills up with s**t. I clean the cookies every time I close my browser. It's just part of the process for me. And I run Ad-Aware and SpyBot Search and Destroy along with MacAfee every day. I know that sounds like a lot to do but once burned, twice shy as they say. I don't mean to make it sound like surfing the net is dangerous but it's not the same playland it used to be even 2 years ago. A computer is a big investment and to have it screwed with by jerks who may be doing it for fun or worse be out to steal personal information means you have to exercise caution with e-mail and Web sites!
Enough of the doom and gloom. Now go outside and play. It's a beautiful day. What are you doing inside?
