Shouldn't make a whit of difference. The only thing that might keep him 
from seeing the updated info is if he didn't clear out Chrome's cache 
and history first. Simply hitting ctrl+F5 should bypass the cache 
completely and reload a fresh page.

On 11/10/2008 10:04 AM, Darren VanBuren wrote:
> I think what he means is that he changed his website's DNS entry to a
> different IP. How Chrome affects this, I have no idea.
>
> Darren VanBuren
> -------------------------
> Sent from my iPod
>
> On Nov 10, 2008, at 6:56, Kirk M<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  wrote:
>
>    
>> Umm, what do you mean by "switching servers"? Perhaps I'm being numb
>> here but I'm not sure what you mean. A browser can't show a server
>> but a
>> server can connect the Internet to a browser but you'd never know the
>> difference.
>>
>> On 11/10/2008 9:42 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>      
>>> Maybe I don't understand how browsers work, but aren't they all
>>> connected to the same internet?  I recently switched servers.  For
>>> some odd reason, Google Chrome had the updated server displaying when
>>> IE, Firefox, and Safari were still on the old server.  (Yes, I did
>>> refresh the page and delete any temp files).  This lasted for a good
>>> 30 minutes until the other browsers finally updated.  Is this
>>> possible?  Why did this happen?
>>>        
>>>        
>
> >
>
>    

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