DTXTR helps you decipher txt msgs
Do you feel lost when you read abbreviations and acronyms on Twitter and other web sites because you have no idea what PMIGBOM* stands for? DTXTR can help. While this site from LG is designed with a tongue-in-cheek purpose of helping parents translate the text messages their teenage kids are sending, it can also be a helfpul guide for common abbreviations found on internet chat rooms, forums and other web pages.
As for figuring out what your teenager kids are talking about, it's probably going to take a lot more than a web based translator to figure that out.
*Putting mind in gear before opening mouth
As for figuring out what your teenager kids are talking about, it's probably going to take a lot more than a web based translator to figure that out.
*Putting mind in gear before opening mouth













Comments
5
Subscribe to commentsder_tuxmanMay 28th 2009 1:27PM
I'll never understand Americans; such a decadent community, but swearing is ALWAYS censored... weirdos.
jiggleblingMay 28th 2009 2:20PM
Flash crash!!
Type something into the normal english box, click submit.
Then click the normal english box again!
Crashes FF3, IE7 (maybe 6).
Adobe how could you let this happen?! Flash isn't supposed to allow stupid coders to crash my browser, losing my blogpost about a squirrel and a fairy!
I was guaranteed frontpage on Slashdot!!!
jiggleblingMay 28th 2009 2:26PM
Also,
Brad, you're on a roll. My only two comments have been on your posts!
EliotMay 28th 2009 3:01PM
What does #@&! translate to? It's far too many letters for 'ass'.
iGateMay 28th 2009 10:37PM
that's what i was thinking.