Bob Schwartz wrote:
Example would be a page with a sort of table of contents which lists minutes of the past five years board meeting, the user clicks on one, it pops up they read it, print it or whatever, then go to the next.

It gives them a chance to browse without leaving the TOC page,

And so does a regular link (since I can just middle click to open in a new tab).

With a regular link I can follow it normally and then use the back button to get back to where I was before, without having to close windows or dig around in my task manager to find the window with the previous document in it.

--
David Dorward                               <http://dorward.me.uk/>


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