Both Chromium and Internet Explorer treat <a href="c:/test">...</a>
in a file served from e.g. file:///C:/Users/Anne%20van%20Kesteren/Desktop/file.html in a special way. The resolved URL becomes file:///c:/test (uppercase C in Chromium) rather than c:/test (note that c: is a valid URL scheme) as it does in Gecko. Is there a good reason to preserve this quirk? (It seems the uppercasing of drive letters is a Chromium-specific quirk that just needs to die.) -- http://annevankesteren.nl/
