First a note about frames in general.
The html syntax
<frame src=blah>
doesn't open that page and paste its contents into the current buffer,
as happens with every other browser,
instead it creates a hyperlink to that page.
Click on that frame if you want to, or leave it be.
This is not a great strategy but 15 years ago it was easy,
and it's still easy.

If we wanted to continue this theme then
frame.contentDocument.open() would inject an anchor into the dom tree at that 
point,
and a hyperlink into the html,
as though it had said <frame src=blah> from the start.
This is doable of course, I just didn't know anything about it.
It might involve another js side effect.

Any help putting this together would be appreciated.
It's been quiet recently because my life is in termoil and I'm trying
to settle it down.

Karl Dahlke
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