10% of web users take SICK PLEASURE from browsing while on the toilet

Computers, Internet, Laptops / Notebooks, Web 2.0, Websites, Weirdness
Share

plusnet-toilet-web-survey1.jpgWhat is WRONG with you people? A survey by leading UK internet facilitator Plusnet has found that one-in-ten people have done some web browsing while on the toilet, either at work or risking a written warning by endangering company equipment in the workplace loo.

35% of users regularly go online from the comfort of bed, preferring to anonymously slag a few people off on the internet as a happy and relaxing way to end the day, with 85% of all web users currently hooked up via wi-fi and able to use their PCs wherever they damn well like and TO HELL with public perception.

“We wouldn’t recommend people taking their laptops into the bath or shower!” warned Plusnet UK’s product director Neil Armstrong, just in case you thought Plusnet was encouraging or recommending potentially dangerous and irresponsible net usage. It is not.

All of the above is the official explanation as to why we have used a photograph of a woman using a computer on the toilet today. Plusnet’s people took the photograph, not us. We’ve never taken a camera into a toilet, just so you know.

(Via Plusnet)

Related posts: WoW players are “awesome” | DVD piracy blossoming

Gary Cutlack
For latest tech stories go to TechDigest.tv

5 comments

  • At the same time, the state’s first sandhill crane hunting season will be this Sept. 4 through Oct. 10 in the Northwest Goose Zone in portions of Kittson, Roseau, Marshall, Pennington, Red Lake and Polk herve leger counties.

  • The whole debate has, apparently, been sparked off by the proposed erection of a statue commemorating Norman Collie and his local guide John Mackenzie on the island belstaff of Skye.

  • PlusNet are easily the worst ISP I’ve ever had the misfortune of dealing with. They throttled and blocked traffic well beyond the levels they advertised, and when challenged first ignored me, then obfuscated the issue by claiming that their traffic shaping systems had been temporarily malfunctioning. Of course, these “malfunctions” continued in exactly the same way at precisely the same times indefinitely. Their customer service is also little more than a deliberate runaround exercise designed to frustrate customers until they give up. And good luck getting a MAC code from them without arbitration, even if you can prove you’re not getting the service you’ve paid for.

Comments are closed.