don't be suspicious. this works perfectly, and the installation is completely seperate for each application - each copy of explorer is using it's own DLLs, so there's no cross-rendering issues. i happen to be running everything on my imac through VMWare, and also have a couple of older PCs for testing - the test results are identicle in both IE7 and IE6 running on clean installations of windows without other explorers, and on the VMWare running all together. absolutely no difference whatsoever.
IE5 and 4 are only running on the VMWare, but who needs those anymore... just praying for the day i won't have to look at either copy of explorer again, but that's still far off unfortunately. Andy Matthews-4 wrote: > > I've seen that before, but I'm a little suspect that it's not "quite" spot > on. It seems as if some of the various behaviours aren't replicated > precisely. > > _____ > > From: jquery-en@googlegroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On > Behalf Of Matt Quackenbush > Sent: Thursday, January 24, 2008 11:05 AM > To: jquery-en@googlegroups.com > Subject: [jQuery] Re: Feb 12 IE6 Forced Update > > > On Jan 24, 2008 8:21 AM, Andy Matthews wrote: > > > > I personally have put off installing it IE7 at home so that I can still > test > > with IE6. > > > > > Andy, > > If you want to be able to test with IE6 and IE7 on the same machine, check > out the following link. > > http://tredosoft.com/Multiple_IE > > I've been using Multiple IE's for a long, long time now with no problems. > It's a lifesaver, in my opinion. > > > Matt > > > > -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/Feb-12-IE6-Forced-Update-tp15055989s27240p15072508.html Sent from the jQuery General Discussion mailing list archive at Nabble.com.