>       First, what does the browser send out to the server when
> the customer clicks a mouse button?

Nothing.  It only sends something when a link is activated or a
form is submitted, or an address is entered.

> site that is causing the problem.  The proxy translates anything
> it can in to standard html and passes already-working html right
> on through to lynx.

I think the only way to provide a general solution is to use a browser
that supports Javascript and the IE and/or NS browser object model.  A
proxy can only really recognize particular idioms, not solve the general
problem.


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