Hey there,
Well, I design quite a few pops for various clients from
time to time. Since everyone started using these pop
blockers it has been a nightmare.
I have clients who say, "Well, I have such and such a
program, can you get them through that?" Or, "I can get it
through this one, but no
: Monday, October 27, 2003 2:20 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [wdvltalk] Re: Pop ups situations
>I work on a site where the policy is: when a visitor clicks on an
>external link we target a new window, and to minimize the amount of
>windows we usually send it to a "named wind
---Original Message-
From: Dominique Clawson
Sent: Monday, October 27, 2003 3:36 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [wdvltalk] Re: Pop ups situations
Hi David:
Yes, I do like you, I use target="windowName" (your third named
alternative). And I never thought of those as popups eit
David,
> - a new named window, through a targeted link.
How is this third option different from a pop-up? Your one and two are
JavaScript and same window; I am struggling to understand the difference
here. I would like an acceptable way to show information which does not
get the 'pop-up' con
Well, Joe:
I think that popups are windows that open without user's input. What I'm
doing is have the user click on the link because it is information that
they want to access. So to me the difference is one is forced on you
(travel there, buy this, take the survey, etc.) and the other is a
wanted
Dominique,
So the options narrow considerably; I take it frames are now frowned on as
being useful to achieve both the original window (in part at least) and
changing information.
Since I am now finding myself irritated by some of the newer floating
devices which cover text if the window in use
Hi Dominique,
> So, I'm assuming that other people are using the
> same kind of dumb popup guards which block every
> new window. [...] Can I get some feedback as to
> how some of you are handling this?
The only truly safe way to avoid your popups being blocked is not to use
popups :-)
If you mu
Re Dominique's problem, wanting to open pages in a new window but being
blocked as if it were a popup..
I would add this to Jon's contribution - if you open your links in a new
named window using JavaScript, your original window should then be able to
check for the existence of the new window to s
Ok, I haven't really been following this thread, but mozilla's built in
pop up blocker doesn't stop pop ups generated from a link, only
*unrequested* pop ups, don't know about third party blockers though. I
personally hate going to a site that starts throwing new windows at me,
whether it's adv
_target is deprecated in CSS2. Which I suppose is a not very subtle way of
discouraging the use of popups. Similarly, the incorporation of event
handlers like onmousover etc into the browser discourages the over use of
javascript. Find a way to do it without js for accessibility and then you
don't
Dominique,
I haven't seen this option discussed on the thread. Talk with the IT folks.
Most pop-up products (homegrown or commercial) have some exception hot-key
installed into the programming. If they don't, that should be easily
configurable. If you are able to get the hot-key exception, post
Joseph wrote:
>Dominique,
>So the options narrow considerably; I take it frames are now frowned
on as being useful to achieve both the original window (in part at
least) and changing information.
Exactly, I used to have a frame buster for my home page, but now, our
university is developing a
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