I'm working on a layout that makes heavy use of a rounded corner technique using images and I've just stumbled across a bug in IE6 that appears to break just about every rounded corner technique I've seen.
So, from what I've gathered, IE6 will scale images up (even background images) if the screen's DPI is set at some value higher than 96 (the Dell Latitude in the office with 1400x1050 resolution came from the factory with the setting at 120 DPI and the IE6 rendering bug along with it). There is an MSDN article about how to change the registry to prevent it from scaling: http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/default.asp?url=/workshop/author/dhtml/overview/highdpi.asp ... and a Dell KB article about how to fix the "problem": http://premiersupport.dell.com/support/topics/global.aspx/support/kb/en/document?dn=FA1084811&SvcTag=67XYM41 Microsoft kind of hedges on calling it a "problem", but Dell definitely refers to it as a "problem" that needs fixing. Has anyone else dealt with this problem? Is it something that web designers need to accomodate for, or is it just considered a bug in IE that can be safely ignored? Anyone have any clue as to how widespread this is? Apparently, this has been around for quite some time (the Dell article is from 2003) ... and Dell is still shipping laptops with the default setting causing this problem. Drew ______________________________________________________________________ css-discuss [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.css-discuss.org/mailman/listinfo/css-d List wiki/FAQ -- http://css-discuss.incutio.com/ Supported by evolt.org -- http://www.evolt.org/help_support_evolt/
