> Am I the only battling service vendor who actually feels good when > somebody bookmarks my website ? > I can absorb the overhead of accesses to a favorites icon. > This may be a security hazard for the client, but I detect a > holier-than-thou attitude here against M$. > Will somebody tell me why this M$ initiative is bad, other than for > pre-determined prejudices ? Maybe we're getting tired of MS initiatives, such as the very rude offline site grabbing IE5 does, the crude implementation of this favicon thing, the fact that IE5 replaces error messages with its own if they aren't at least 512 bytes or something, er, the list probably goes on a bit. Sure we can deal with all that, but at our cost and sweet time. > Rgds > Rod Butcher -- Eric
- Re: Another IE5 complaint Ruben I Safir
- Re: Another IE5 complaint Steven Champeon
- Re: Another IE5 complaint Craig Shaver
- Re: Another IE5 complaint Jeffrey W. Baker
- Re: Another IE5 complaint Matt Sergeant
- Re: Another IE5 complaint darren chamberlain
- Re: Another IE5 complaint Robin Berjon
- Re: Another IE5 complaint Matt Sergeant
- RE: Another IE5 complaint Fulko Hew
- RE: Another IE5 complaint Tubbs, Derric L
- Re: Another IE5 complaint Eric Cholet
- Re: Another IE5 complaint Fabrice Scemama
- Re: Another IE5 complaint Jeffrey W. Baker
- Re: Another IE5 complaint Tom Christiansen
- Re: Another IE5 complaint Ruben I Safir
- RE: Another IE5 complaint Stephen Anderson
- Re: Another IE5 complaint Tim Tompkins
- Re: Another IE5 complaint Ruben I Safir
- Re: Another IE5 complaint Joe Pearson