Ulrich Hobelmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Mike Meyer wrote: >> Try turning off JavaScript (I assume you don't because you didn't >> complain about it). Most of the sites on the web that use it don't >> even use the NOSCRIPT tag to notify you that you have to turn the >> things on - much less use it to do something useful. > I had JS off for a long time, but now so many websites expect it, and > even make browsing more convenient, that I grudgingly accepted it. ;)
I've turned it on because I'm using an ISP that requires me to log in via a javascript only web page. They have a link that claims to let non-JS browsers log in, but it doesn't work. My primary browser doesn't support JavaScript or CSS, and is configured with images turned off, mostly because I want the web to be fast. What it does have is the ability to launch one of three different external browsers on either the current page or any link on the page, so those faciities are a few keystrokes away. The default browser on my mac has all that crap turned on, but I dont have anything I consider either import or sensitive on it, and the only client who has data on it considers such thinsg an acceptable risk. >> Sturgeon's law applies to web sites, just like it does to everything >> else. > Yep. Filtering is the future in the overloaded world. And to the best of my knowledge, Google filters out content that my primary desktop browser can't display. <mike -- Mike Meyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://www.mired.org/home/mwm/ Independent WWW/Perforce/FreeBSD/Unix consultant, email for more information. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list