-----Original Message----- Users that turn off JS are akin, in my mind, to automobile drivers who decide they would rather play Fred Flintstone, cut holes in the floorboards and not bother starting the engine. Oh, you'll get around, but your missing out!
While I am certainly not trying to say there aren't very legitimate concerns with using JS, like most things they are overcome with knowledge and ability. I mean, no one complains because Windows ships with fdisk and format, they are at least as dangerous potentially! -----Original Message----- Well,... If we look behind the problems that could arise with JavaScript... I am really convinced that JS in a webapp is a really BAD idea. Think about Cross-Scripting. It is not that your web-applicaiton is the culprit, but someoneelse's bad-behaving Javascript that does the damage. I am just waiting to here about the first case where a developer has to take the responsibilities for real damage to a use, because he required JS for a web-app and in this way forcing the user to switch on JS-support in his browser, rendering him susceptible to damage by another websites ill-behaving JS-code... I also think that a well-designed web-UI does not need JS at all... regards Alexander --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]