Yeah, but some indication will be helpful, even the one IE has been giving - "## images downloading" or something. A count down for resources, even if the resource count changes every few seconds, it is still preferable against being lost in the dark in some way. Do you not agree?
☆PhistucK On Mon, Sep 28, 2009 at 16:50, Evan Martin <[email protected]> wrote: > f you wait for all subresources > to load, you will hover below 100% as large images or slow > subresources load (you ever notice how some sites will often have > "waiting for someadnetwork.com" in the status bar even after it feels > like site is done loading?). Add to that that it's difficult to know > how far you are along in loading resources: there's HTTP 1.1 chunked > encoding and HTTP 0.9 without a content-length header, and then there > are apps like gmail that do a bunch of tricks with subframes and > javascript to present a multi-stage loading process. > --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ Chromium Developers mailing list: [email protected] View archives, change email options, or unsubscribe: http://groups.google.com/group/chromium-dev -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
