Hi Andrew,

First of all thanks for testing and confirming it works in IE6. I
didn't know anyone still used IE6!

Secondly thanks for the idea then. I didn't quite read your idea
properly first time round as was focusing on fixing IE issue rather
than my compliance issue.
I glanced over it and saw something about cookies, I know nothing of
cookies. I also noticed Pauls comments of very very sneaky and left it
at that.



On Jan 1, 9:45 pm, Andrew Leach <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Jan 1, 9:18 pm, SteveCurrie <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Anyone care to try again, happy for help.
>
> Well, I tried in IE6. Clicked OK for the mixed content and got a map.
> Unfortunately I don't have IE7 or IE8, but the security model is
> changed in IE7 and presumably IE8 continued that.
>
> Seehttp://windowsitpro.com/article/articleid/48729/microsoft-hones-inter...
> -- have you made your site a trusted site? Apparently, trusting a site
> allows the same behaviour as IE6, and it's probably reasonable to ask
> your customers to trust your site.
>
> > How about if I make the map page available to ALL and if the user is
> > authenticated then display their data if not display our head office
> > location? That way the "real" map is available to all its just the
> > markers location that varies.
>
> I think that's what I suggested -- er, I mean, I think that's an
> excellent suggestion.
>
> Andrew

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