ON: Wed, 27 Aug 2003 00:38:39 -0400 Ruzya <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Offerred:
"HTML is supposed to be a standard for cross platform communication - unless your microsoft."
Snip:It is supposed to be a standard cross platform communication, but sometimes you have to write different HTML coding for IE and Netscape to get the same function. It's very frustrating to figure out.
"What if your potential viewer is using Netscape or Opera or ICab or Safari or Konqueror or Mozilla? Do you turn them away because they are not microsoft?"
The website school that I attended, said that most people use IE and Netscape. If a JavaScript University teacher can't figure out why the HTML coding works in IE and not completely in Netscape, then what hope do I have?
Snip:
I don't know what else to tell you. It acts like it's going to openup, and when the IE browser window opens up, before any images
come up on the screen, it freezes, and a grinding sound is heard through the land.
Hi Ruzya;
It sounds as though you may have several problems.
1. Running IE (could be hardware/ RAM size or soft ware conflicts/ other running processes, faulty download, IE version compatibility) .
2. Page not readable by older/non IE browsers.( HTML coding conflicts).
I Have Netscape 4.78, iCab 2.95 and Mozilla 1.2.1.
Your site opens perfectly in Mozilla 1.2.1 However in the other two; iCab only shows the caution message for using Microsoft for best viewing. Netscape also shows a transverse line below the message. Also in iCab there is a small square to the left of the message ( indicating a non printable character?).
Note as reference for the knowlegeable on the list, My Mozilla is: Mozilla 1.2.1/ Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; PPC; en-US; rv:1.2.1) Gecko/20021130
I know little about HTML, but there are various releases of the HTML spec. However I have iCab set to recognize the latest that iCab recognizes and also to report as IE. Have you set the proper preferences in the new IE that you downloaded. Again I know nothing of IE, so do not even know if that is a valid question.
As some one else has indicated, it could be an available RAM problem. Unless there is something else running, you should have plenty, if enough is allocated to IE.
I hope my ramblings add something positive. Maybe others more knowlegeable can solve your problem.
ernie
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