The Gaydon online parish magazine is a single HTML file which
references a common CSS file.
http://www.gaydon.org.uk/mags.html
It takes on average 31 seconds to load and display a magazine using
NetSurf #3055 on an Iyonix. Javascript on or off makes no difference.
Using NetSurf 3.2 the page l
On Sat, 07 Nov 2015 11:35:26 GMT, John Rickman Iyonix wrote:
> The Gaydon online parish magazine is a single HTML file which
> references a common CSS file.
>
> http://www.gaydon.org.uk/mags.html
>
> It takes on average 31 seconds to load and display a magazine using
> NetSurf #3055 on an Iyon
"Chris Young", on 7 Nov, wrote:
> On Sat, 07 Nov 2015 11:35:26 GMT, John Rickman Iyonix wrote:
>
> > The Gaydon online parish magazine is a single HTML file which references
> > a common CSS file.
> >
> > http://www.gaydon.org.uk/mags.html
> >
> > It takes on average 31 seconds to load and disp
On Sat, 7 Nov 2015 15:08:01 +, David Pitt wrote:
> "Chris Young", on 7 Nov, wrote:
>
> > On Sat, 07 Nov 2015 11:35:26 GMT, John Rickman Iyonix wrote:
> >
> > > The Gaydon online parish magazine is a single HTML file which references
> > > a common CSS file.
> > >
> > > http://www.gaydon.org
Chris Young wrote
> On Sat, 7 Nov 2015 15:08:01 +, David Pitt wrote:
>> "Chris Young", on 7 Nov, wrote:
>>
>>> On Sat, 07 Nov 2015 11:35:26 GMT, John Rickman Iyonix wrote:
>>>
The Gaydon online parish magazine is a single HTML file which references
a common CSS file.
ht
In message
"Chris Young" wrote:
> On Sat, 7 Nov 2015 15:08:01 +, David Pitt wrote:
>> "Chris Young", on 7 Nov, wrote:
>>
>>> On Sat, 07 Nov 2015 11:35:26 GMT, John Rickman Iyonix wrote:
>>>
The Gaydon online parish magazine is a single HTML file which references
a common CSS f
On 7 November 2015 17:24:31 GMT+00:00, David Pitt wrote:
>
>We RISC OS users think that NetSurf is a RISC OS browser when in fact
>it is multi-platform. Indeed it can even run on an Amiga.
>
Yes, I know ;)
Chris
On 7 Nov 2015 as I do recall,
David Pitt wrote:
> "Chris Young", on 7 Nov, wrote:
>
> > On Sat, 07 Nov 2015 11:35:26 GMT, John Rickman Iyonix wrote:
> >
> > > The Gaydon online parish magazine is a single HTML file which references
> > > a common CSS file.
> > >
> > > http://www.gaydon.
Harriet Bazley wrote
> On 7 Nov 2015 as I do recall,
> David Pitt wrote:
>> "Chris Young", on 7 Nov, wrote:
>>
>>> On Sat, 07 Nov 2015 11:35:26 GMT, John Rickman Iyonix wrote:
>>>
The Gaydon online parish magazine is a single HTML file which references
a common CSS file.
>>>
On 7 Nov 2015 John Rickman Iyonix wrote:
> Harriet Bazley wrote
>> On 7 Nov 2015 as I do recall,
>> David Pitt wrote:
>>> "Chris Young", on 7 Nov, wrote:
>>>
On Sat, 07 Nov 2015 11:35:26 GMT, John Rickman Iyonix wrote:
> The Gaydon online parish magazine is a single H
Peter Young wrote
> Not an answer to the question as asked, but with #3048 the page loads
> in 0.2 seconds.
Apologies, it was not clear from my post that the problem was with
links to magazines on the quoted URL and not with the URL itself
http://www.gaydon.org.uk/mags.html points to a list of
On 7 Nov 2015 John Rickman Iyonix wrote:
> Peter Young wrote
>> Not an answer to the question as asked, but with #3048 the page loads
>> in 0.2 seconds.
> Apologies, it was not clear from my post that the problem was with
> links to magazines on the quoted URL and not with the URL itself
> h
In message <83b1c51e55.iyoj...@rickman.argonet.co.uk>
John Rickman Iyonix wrote:
>
>The Gaydon online parish magazine is a single HTML file which
>references a common CSS file.
>
>http://www.gaydon.org.uk/mags.html
>
>It takes on average 31 seconds to load and display a magazine using
>
In message <5bcaf01e55.pnyo...@pnyoung.ormail.co.uk>
Peter Young wrote:
> On 7 Nov 2015 John Rickman Iyonix wrote:
>> Peter Young wrote
>>> Not an answer to the question as asked, but with #3048 the page loads
>>> in 0.2 seconds.
>> Apologies, it was not clear from my post that the proble
On Sat, 07 Nov 2015 20:10:45 GMT, David Pitt wrote:
> (20.17) content/content.c:386 content_destroy: content 0x4e5f42a0
> file:///%3CBootDisc$Root%3E/Work/Internet/Browsers/html/favicon.png
>
> (41.38) content/fetchers/curl.c:834 fetch_curl_done: done
> http://www.gaydon.org.uk/css/pcmi
In message
"Chris Young" wrote:
> On Sat, 07 Nov 2015 20:10:45 GMT, David Pitt wrote:
>> (20.17) content/content.c:386 content_destroy: content 0x4e5f42a0
>> file:///%3CBootDisc$Root%3E/Work/Internet/Browsers/html/favicon.png
>>
>> (41.38) content/fetchers/curl.c:834 fetch_curl_done:
Chris Young wrote
> On Sat, 07 Nov 2015 20:10:45 GMT, David Pitt wrote:
>> (20.17) content/content.c:386 content_destroy: content 0x4e5f42a0
>> file:///%3CBootDisc$Root%3E/Work/Internet/Browsers/html/favicon.png
>>
>> (41.38) content/fetchers/curl.c:834 fetch_curl_done: done
>> http://ww
On 7 Nov 2015 Peter Young wrote:
>> If you have any builds between these two it would help to pin it down
>> to just a few potential culprit changes.
> Not an answer to the question as asked, but with #3048 the page loads
> in 0.2 seconds.
I find that magazines take around 32s to display on my
On 7 Nov 2015 David Pitt wrote:
> 30s is an interesting duration NetSurf-wise, that is how long before
> fetches time-out. From a look at the log :-
This could explain why 'full save' didn't save the css files.
--
Richard Porterhttp://www.minijem.plus.com/
Skype: minije
On 7 Nov 2015 Chris Young wrote:
> A missing file shouldn't cause a timeout though - just a response from
> the server containing error 404.
404 is page not found. Other missing files like css should be ignored
by the browser. In any case if the file didn't exist the server would
respond with a
On Sat, 07 Nov 2015 23:40:55 GMT, Richard Porter wrote:
> On 7 Nov 2015 Chris Young wrote:
>
> > A missing file shouldn't cause a timeout though - just a response from
> > the server containing error 404.
>
> 404 is page not found.
It's file not found. Any missing file on a web server will res
> Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2015 05:32:48 -0800
> From: Dave Higton
> Subject: NetSurf progress
>
> If you have been downloading Continuous Integration (CI) builds,
> you will probably have noticed that there have been over 25 of
> them in the last few days. This represents the progress that
> NetSurf has
On 7 Nov 2015 as I do recall,
John Rickman Iyonix wrote:
> The problem was introduced between 28/11/2014 and 6/01/2015.
> (#2398) is fast, (#2509) is slow.
>
> If you have any builds between these two it would help to pin it down
> to just a few potential culprit changes.
>
I've got #24
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