> Hmm, maybe I'm revealing banking secrets here ;-) but all the Internet
> banking systems I know use a password (aka Personal Authorization Code).
Whoops, forgot to specify that I meant North American banks.
Alex wrote:
> Heikki Toivonen wrote:
>
>> Yup. Behold the high tech leaders of the free world.
>> Well, I obviously haven't checked all American online banks, but
>> permanent login & password seems to be the norm. As far as I know
>> most European banks use one-time passwords...
>>
>
> What ex
Henri Sivonen wrote:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Alex <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
>
>>since Bank of America seems to block Mozilla also
>>
>
> That's bad. Why do they do it? Wells Fargo is (was?) reportedly blocking
> Mozilla because they were afraid of form manager. Does this mean
Wayne Alligood wrote:
> ... I currently have available to me, on-line banking via
> Compass Bank. I enjoy this service very much and don't want to leave
> home without it. Presently, Netscape 6.0 isn't recognized by them and I
> am not sure if it will be in the future.
I'm involved in the
JTK wrote:
> You haven't seen much of Outlook then. If it had a decent newsreader in it,
> I'd have completely dumped Nav4.7x long ago.
There is one great feature in the Mozilla newsreader that has me hooked:
when I move the mouse over the subject list panel or message panel, the
mouse wheel