That makes sense. I should hire someone to upgrade all my web sites,
but it's not in the budget at the moment. I started trying to learn
Dream Weaver, but haven't really had time to pursue it seriously. iWeb
is idiot proof, but the results leave a lot to be desired.
Paul
On Jun 10, 2009, at 7:04 PM, Doug Franklin wrote:
paul stenquist wrote:
I guess I don't know why someone would want to use "oddball"
browsers. Or IE for that matter.
Since I develop HTML sites and other stuff "Web-related" (sometimes
in very indirect ways) for a living, I test all my stuff, and most
other people's stuff, with a boatload of different browsers of every
ilk.
My job is to provide my customers with a communication channel; it's
not in their interest, and therefore not in my interest, to produce
a limited or filtered communication channel. So I ensure, to the
best of my ability, that's not what I produce.
The one major browser that hasn't made it into my testing menagerie
yet is Google Chrome. I tried it on Windows early on and it ticked
me off during the install, so I've avoided it since. I guess I'll
just have to put it in a virtual machine so I can test with it
without worrying about "having problems". [PS, don't ask, I don't
even remember what it was that ticked me off, but I felt it was
serious enough to keep Chrome off my systems.]
--
Thanks,
DougF (KG4LMZ)
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