On 16 Sep 2007 "David J. Ruck" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The GPS news letter I received contains broken HTML in that it
> features pound sign characters (&A3) in the UTF8 encoding.
> I expect these not be rendered, but the precesence of these
> characters stops further display of the text, which
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
John-Mark Bell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On Mon, 17 Sep 2007, Tony Moore wrote:
>
>> In the
>> BBC says that "Over the coming months the BBC World Service will be
>> working on creating a new look and feel to the English site and we could
>> really use listeners
On 15 Sep 2007 Kevin Wells <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> "David J. Ruck" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>We are evaluating different web shop software, most work ok, but the
>>latest fails with NetSurf. On attempting to add the demo product to
>>the cart, it
On 17 Sep 2007 Brian Howlett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 17 Sep, Tony Moore wrote:
>> In http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/programmes/over_to_you.shtml the
>> BBC says that "Over the coming months the BBC World Service will be
>> working on creating a new look and feel to the English site an
On 17 Sep 2007 John-Mark Bell wrote:
> On Mon, 17 Sep 2007, Tony Moore wrote:
>> In http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/programmes/over_to_you.shtml the
>> BBC says that "Over the coming months the BBC World Service will be
>> working on creating a new look and feel to the English site and we could
On 17 Sep, Tony Moore wrote:
> In http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/programmes/over_to_you.shtml the
> BBC says that "Over the coming months the BBC World Service will be
> working on creating a new look and feel to the English site and we could
> really use listeners help. ... To join in the disc
On Mon, 17 Sep 2007, Tony Moore wrote:
In http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/programmes/over_to_you.shtml the
BBC says that "Over the coming months the BBC World Service will be
working on creating a new look and feel to the English site and we could
really use listeners help. ... To join in the
On Mon, 17 Sep 2007, John-Mark Bell wrote:
Except, of course, that, in the case of HTML documents, the body element is
special-cased -- any background specified upon it is positioned relative to
the *root* element's padding edge (and no background is ever drawn for the
body element). NetSurf c
In http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/programmes/over_to_you.shtml the
BBC says that "Over the coming months the BBC World Service will be
working on creating a new look and feel to the English site and we could
really use listeners help. ... To join in the discussions ... please
visit ... http://ww
On Mon, 17 Sep 2007, John-Mark Bell wrote:
The CSS spec states that box backgrounds are positioned relative to
the box's padding edge, which is what NetSurf is doing here.
Except, of course, that, in the case of HTML documents, the body element
is special-cased -- any background specified upo
On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've setup NetSurf in the upcoming Puppy Linux v3.00 as the
internal HTML viewer.
Cool.
http://linux.die.net/man/sysctl
It's almost correct, except an incorrect red rectangle is
displayed overlapping the text, making the text unreadable.
The spur
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