Justin French wrote:
What I'd like to see is a program for Mac OS X that will load a URL into
all currently running browsers (including those in X11, VirtualPC and
MacClassic, so it's truly cross-platform), take a screen shot, and
present them back in one tabbed interface as a series of screen
Sorry, I just couldn't let this one go.. Its a common misconception that
you cannot sell open source software.
http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/selling.html
;)
On Wed, 2004-05-26 at 11:56, Justin French wrote:
Screw opensource -- I would pay serious cash for such a tool! This is
MUCH better
Not quite what youy asked for, but I've found Browser Cam to be pretty useful:
http://www.browsercam.com
Depending on the size of your organization, the (13-month) annual contract that allows
for up to 10 sub-users is really a good deal at $400.
Scott Reston
www.capstrat.com
-Original
well i'm not trying to use an paid-online tool
i'm trying to build open source free tool.
On Tue, 25 May 2004 11:37:20 -0700 (PDT), Krassy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
--- Jad Madi [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
is there any Web browsers emulators?
http://www.browsercam.com/
It's very difficult (impossible) to emulate all the bugs in a browser
without running the browser. Emulators can emulate the required behaviour
but generally not the bugs. So unless you actually do what people like
browsercam have done and set up a bank of machines running the browsers and
That's true, running IE6 under Linux via wine [1] even introduces extra
quirks and bugs, which I sometimes falsely blame IE for until I go an
actually check on XP. It does work relatively well though, and its handy
for quick testing.
Regards
Chris Blown
[1] http://www.winehq.com
On Wed,
On 26/05/2004, at 10:15 AM, Peter Firminger wrote:
It's very difficult (impossible) to emulate all the bugs in a browser
without running the browser. Emulators can emulate the required
behaviour
but generally not the bugs. So unless you actually do what people like
browsercam have done and set up