Actually....

        They would claim this as a "Feature" as it does speed up the initial   
connection to Microsoft Internet Information Servers. They use some kind   
of non-standard (Really? MS being "non-standard" Who would have thought   
that?) way of initializing communication between IE and IIS. It skips the   
initial handshake and when the first access attempt is made by IE, IIS   
starts spitting out the page, as the ACK. (Or something like that... The   
article I read went into more detail then I am currently able to follow.)

        Anyway, when talking to a Squid proxy server, and everyone else's web   
servers, this is why IE is slow to receive pages. (Since it then has to   
start acting like a standard browser when it's initial BS communication   
attempt fails.) With Squid, you get that "Page cannot be displayed   
error."

Regards,
Robert Adkins II
IT Manager/Buyer
Impel Industries, Inc.
Ph. 586-254-5800
Fx. 586-254-5804


 -----Original Message-----
From: Schelstraete Bart [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, January 24, 2003 2:48 PM
To: Robert Adkins
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED];   
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [squid-users] Squid V2.5 and RedHat

   

Quoting Robert Adkins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

>       If the client is using IE 6.x and this occurs only after the initial   
    

> authentication then don't worry about it. That is a known IE bug.

Microsoft will say that it's a new feature in IE :)

rgrds,

       Bart

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