Incidentally,

I have IE 6 on my work computer (No Tabs), and some times need it for our
Human Resource Systems.

I use FireFox (Portable) for my tiddlywiki's and the  "IE Tabs" firefox
plugin which allows all nominated URL patterns to open in an IE6 tab within
FF. Great Stuff.

I also found the FF Plugin "Its all text", which allows you to open a text
edit field (read tiddler in edit mode) in your prefered editor. This can be
a good way to get the second window, as is Google Notes installed in both IE
and FF.

Tony

TonyM

If you have not found an easy way to do it with TiddlyWiki, you have missed
something.
www.tiddlywiki.com



On Thu, Jul 9, 2009 at 06:02, Ken Girard <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> So in the case of IE6 it would open another browser window. Later
> versions of IE have tabs.
> And in some cases this is prefered as I can put two windows next to
> each other, so I can see the data I am copying from one window to the
> other. I can't do that with tabs (Actually I think there is a plugin
> that allows this...but is that for Firefox, Opera, Chrome, IE7-8 or
> Safari?)
>
> What does he gain? The perception that it is all one piece.
> You might as well ask why people embed videos into a blog post, rather
> then just have it take you to the site that is hosting the file
> (YouTube, etc)? It is a matter of looks, perception and keeping people
> on the task at hand (or in some cases, on the website)
>
> Ken Girard
>
> On Jul 8, 1:10 pm, "Mark S." <[email protected]> wrote:
> > You can also get this functionality via Eric Shuman's mini browser:
> >
> >  http://www.tiddlytools.com/#MiniBrowserPlugin
> >
> > Including various controls.
> >
> > The question is, either way, what do you gain over simply opening a
> > separate browser tab? Oh wait, IE doesn't have tabs, right?
> >
> > -- Mark
> >
> > On Jul 7, 10:17 pm, Anthony Muscio <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> > > I think you may need something to get inline HTML to work;
> >
> > > Than put this in your tiddler
> >
> > > <html><div align="center"><iframe src="http://url"; frameborder="0"
> > > width="100%" height="600"></iframe></div></html>
> >
> > > Now go to a Google Docs document and open it. Then Copy its address
> from the
> > > browser address line and place it in the place above "http://url";.
> >
> > > This may have problems but it looks good, test fully. Closing and
> exiting
> > > the GoogleDoc seems to break out of tiddlywiki.
> >
> > > However it may be a lead.
> >
> > > TonyM
> >
> > > If you have not found an easy way to do it with TiddlyWiki, you have
> missed
> > > something.www.tiddlywiki.com
> >
> > > On Sun, Jul 5, 2009 at 15:50, Greg <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > > >  I have a spread sheet that does some statistical calculations for
> > > > educationl researchers. I want user to actaully be able to run the
> > > > spreadsheet in the tiddler. I have the spreadsheet located in my
> > > > google docs directory. I am able to embed it and it is static, but I
> > > > want to find out how users can actaully run it. Is this possible?
> >
> > > >  thanks
> >
> > > > Dr.Code- Hide quoted text -
> >
> > - Show quoted text -
> >
>

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