On 9/28/04 7:08 PM Ryan Christie [EMAIL PROTECTED] sent this out:
AOL browser is uses the IE engine, does it not?
Yes. Most home users using Windows would still be using the IE driven
version of the AOL browser (not sure about Mac). One thing worth
considering when developing for AOL is the
Tim Shortt wrote:
You have to actually test on an AOL
account to really see any affect of this (or any other) behavior (versus
just running a local AOL browser, which I did for years).
If you're really, really committed (or just masochistic) to testing it,
but want to avoid having to actually
Patrick H. Lauke wrote:
If you're really, really committed (or just masochistic) to testing it,
but want to avoid having to actually get an AOL account, you can also
run your own server http://www.aolserver.com/ and do testing on your
local setup under true battle conditions...either that, or
In a developers meeting today I was asked about AOL, should we test with it...
What do you do? What considerations are there for AOl?
Ted
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On Tue, 28 Sep 2004 16:15:25 -0700, Ted Drake wrote:
In a developers meeting today I was asked about AOL, should we test
with it...
What do you do? What considerations are there for AOl?
If it is a redevelopment, I look to the logs for the current site -
what is the percentage of AOL
AOL browser is uses the IE engine, does it not?
Ted Drake wrote:
In a developers meeting today I was asked about AOL, should we test with it...
What do you do? What considerations are there for AOl?
Ted
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On 9/28/04 7:08 PM Ryan Christie [EMAIL PROTECTED] sent this out:
AOL browser is uses the IE engine, does it not?
I think they switched to Gecko.
Rick Faaberg
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