New Chat Room

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Patient is required. You shouldn't just join say "Anyone here?" and then leave after a few seconds...

When starting a chat room there is a delay before it becomes popular enough that 'regulars' are there and ready to respond quickly to a join. In order for there to be 'regulars' there needs to be long patient sitting around twiddling your thumbs waiting for other people to join.

Sometimes us 'regulars' get distracted "SQUIRREL!" by shiny objects and aren't instantly alerted that you are there... we have to wander by and then see you joined and we might say hello if you said hello and hung around long enough.

So for anyone who wants the chatroom to be a success you need to join and hang in there! Who knows while you're waiting someone else might join and you two can chat while you wait for us "SQUIRREL!" distracted 'regulars' to come back and look.

so now get off your keyboard and go sit in the chat room. who knows I might even say "SQUIRREL!" hello if I'm not distracted.

Dayna.

Comments

Where is the chat room????

Not being super smart, (no matter how much I try to convince my grandkids) I have to admit that I think I understand what a chat room is, But I have no I dea how to get to it. Do I have to "log in" or register?

Any help or info would be appreciated.

If you look down the

Piper's picture

If you look down the right-hand side-bar on any page @ Bigcloset, you will find a "block" that looks like this:

Chat-Block

Just go ahead, and click where it says Lanch WebChat if you want to use the simple WebChat client (No flash, no Java, no installing anything). A window will open/popup (assuming you allow popups) and it will look like this:

Chat-Window

From that page, just enter the Nickname/psudonym/realname etc that you wish to use, and click "connect" and it will take you right in. :)

I hope everyone enjoys the not new, but newly renovated chat rooms. They are near and dear to the heart to me.

-Piper


"She was like a butterfly, full of color and vibrancy when she chose to open her wings, yet hardly visible when she closed them."
— Geraldine Brooks