At 12:37 AM + 2/26/05, Owain Sutton wrote:
Simon Troup wrote:
Go to http://maps.google.com and browse a few maps.
No support for Safari. They need to do more homework.
No support for Europe. They really need to do some work. I feel
like the anti-Columbus, scrolling off into the
Here is a test to see how up-to-date your browser is.
Go to http://maps.google.com and browse a few maps.
Phil Daley AutoDesk
http://www.conknet.com/~p_daley
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Go to http://maps.google.com and browse a few maps.
No support for Safari. They need to do more homework.
--
Simon Troup
Digital Music Art
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On 26 Feb 2005 at 0:22, Simon Troup wrote:
Go to http://maps.google.com and browse a few maps.
No support for Safari. They need to do more homework.
It uses a non-standard technique, the name of which I forget, that
was created by Microsoft and implemented in Internet Explorer, and
that
Simon Troup wrote:
Go to http://maps.google.com and browse a few maps.
No support for Safari. They need to do more homework.
No support for Europe. They really need to do some work. I feel like
the anti-Columbus, scrolling off into the unknown
So, it's really only luck that it's supported in anything other than
IE, as it's depending on functionality that's not a W3C standard.
I looked at it in FireFox and it looked quite effective. I'm not overly
enthusiastic about MS going off and developing their own standards and
innovations
On 2/25/05 7:22 PM, Simon Troup [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
No support for Safari. They need to do more homework.
Actually, it worked fine for me in Safari. I wonder what the difference was
...?
-- Mike
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