I don't want the world, I just want your half.
--Jonathan Rochkind, 2008
more or less
-Ross.
On Tue, Mar 25, 2008 at 8:09 AM, Rob Styles [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 21 Mar 2008, at 16:23, Kevin S. Clarke wrote:
You and someone else could
run the planet
did nobody think the idea that
I did, but I assumed I am missing some inside knowledge that would make
it non-comic.
kc
Rob Styles wrote:
On 21 Mar 2008, at 16:23, Kevin S. Clarke wrote:
You and someone else could
run the planet
did nobody think the idea that jrochkind and someone else running the
planet has some comic
On Tue, 25 Mar 2008, Jay Roos wrote:
Whenever I decide whether to link from our catalog to something external, I
always want to know how I bring the patron back once they've found something
they're interested in. Do you have or have you considered a way to close the
loop and bring someone who
On Tue, Mar 25, 2008 at 2:10 PM, Tim Spalding [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
My big worry is expired sessions. Any ideas how to solve that without
using a new-session URL?
Long session expiry times?
-Nate
I've seen some OPACs with a you are about to be logged out popup.
The LC does this.
I'd think it would be easy to write a JS that simply refreshes the
page, reinvigorating the session.
All of this is idiotic and childish, of course. The only non-library
website I visit now that times out at all
My big worry is expired sessions. Any ideas how to solve that without
using a new-session URL?
Tim
You also pass along a session id and if the user times out, she could
log back in and continue the previous session.
As for,
One of the few useful things that came from that whole HTML Frames
We've had this fight on Code4Lib before, but it deserves mentioning
that no browser breaks this, and no browser developer is going to
break it. It's widely used—for more widely used than any number of
standards-compliant techniques that don't work and probably never
will. To care about this in the