On Sat, 02 Nov 2002 08:10:33 -0800 Ken Moffat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Brett I. Holcomb wrote:
> > I've seen some that just open the new site in the same window and
> > then you can't get back. I'd like to know how it works, too.
> >
> >
> >
> >>Collins wrote:
> >>
> >>>A curious mind wants
Collins wrote:
>Not certain, but from my experience with netscape, they seem to feed back a blank
>address as the site you just came from. It's an annoyance, but if you hold down the
>backspace button you get all the addresses you have accessed. Just skip the blank
>address at the top of the lis
Brett I. Holcomb wrote:
I've seen some that just open the new site in the same window and then you
can't get back. I'd like to know how it works, too.
Collins wrote:
A curious mind wants to know.
How do certain sites accomplish the reprehensible trick of destroying
the page back link, so t
I've seen some that just open the new site in the same window and then you
can't get back. I'd like to know how it works, too.
> Collins wrote:
>> A curious mind wants to know.
>>
>> How do certain sites accomplish the reprehensible trick of destroying
>> the page back link, so that you have t
Collins wrote:
A curious mind wants to know.
How do certain sites accomplish the reprehensible trick of destroying
the page back link, so that you have to start over again after
visiting them (the page back button is grayed out)?
Generally I have found that these sites open a new window over t
A curious mind wants to know.
How do certain sites accomplish the reprehensible trick of destroying
the page back link, so that you have to start over again after
visiting them (the page back button is grayed out)?
--
Collins Richey - Denver Area
Redhat 7.3 system
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