• Anything ‘published’ on the web is viewed as intellectual property and, regardless of whether it displays a copyright symbol or not, is therefore copyrighted by the originator. The only exception to this is if there is a “free and unrestricted reuse” statement associated with the work.

    In order to protect our members and TFL from possible litigation, all members must abide by the following new rules:

    1. Copying and pasting entire articles from another site to TFL is strictly prohibited. The same applies to articles from print or other media, and to posting photographs taken of copyrighted pages or other media.

    2. Copyright law provides for “fair use” of portions of a copyrighted work. You can copy no more than a SINGLE paragraph from the article to your post (3 or 4 sentences at most).

    3. You must provide a link to the article along with the name of website. For example: ww.xxx.yyy/zzz (The Lower Thumbsuck Daily News).

    4. You must provide, in your own words, a brief summary of the article AND your reasons for believing it will be of interest to TFL members. Failure to do so may result in the thread being closed or your post being deleted as a “cut and paste drive by.”

    5. Photographs and other images are also copyrighted. "Hotlinking" of images (so that it appears in your message) from other sites is also prohibited unless you own rights to the image. If you wish to share an image, provide a clickable link to it.

    Posts that do not follow these new guidelines will be altered or deleted by staff. Members who continue to violate this policy may lose their posting privileges at TFL.

    Thank you for your cooperation and your participation in TFL, the leading online forum for firearms enthusiasts.

The Search Feature... :-)

boing

New member
Holy Cow!

I thought I'd give the search function a run for it's money, so I typed "gun", all forums, subject and text, any date.

In about 12 seconds it returned 35,960 threads!

Whoa. By far the most rockin' discussion board search I've ever used. How'd you do that? Is mainly the vB software, the extra server memory, magic?

It's spoiling me. :)
 
boing - I think the big difference is the relational data base vs the flat files the UBB appeared to be using. The faster server and memory are gravy on top of the better structured DB.
 
Enjoy it, Boing!

We've all had to endure having it shut down for far too long, but it was the only way to keep the site running. The new search feature is far superior to that of UBB. It is a joy to use.

In the immortal words of Eeyore, "Thanks for noticin'." ;)
 
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