I vote for number two. I thought the small and larger drop down list (number three)
was a neat trick, but simple is better. People can of course put just the units they
are interested in in their own shopping cart interfaces, but the number two option
covers all the necessary denominations in one simple list. Can someone in Europe
contradict my belief that no one needs (or seriously wants) to denominate spends in DM
or French Francs, let alone Italian Lira or Luxemburg Francs?
Simple really is better! (usually)
I tested the page in IE5.5 128-bit, but strangely in Netscape 6 I only got a blank
page! "<html><body></body></html>"
This is happening trying to log into any "https://..." page at e-gold.com in this copy
of Netscape, but I just logged Netscape into my Datek account without a problem.
All of my other browsers are not able to access a secure site. I'm no longer running
earlier versions of Netscape and Internet Explorer on my main Internet access
computer, so I don't know whether the Javascript might come unstuck in earlier
browsers, such as those that I used to use with e-gold through the Safe Passage secure
web proxy (it gave 128-bit encryption to any old 40-bit browser). see
ftp://ao.com.au/pub/safe_passage/
In keeping with the Australian preferential ballot system, my second preference is
number three, though it shouldn't be necessary if Europeans confirm that they no
longer need the redundant European currencies.
Ian Green
http://two-cents-worth.com/?107242&EG
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