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I'm using Netscape 6.2 and find it far less intrusive than IE. IE is beginning to feel like taking a walk through a carnival. Netscape 6.2 doesn't do well in a few places, but I'll also mention that I ve also never been virused. Friends that use IE and Outlook have a whole vocabulary of virus buzzwords that I do not understand, but apparently the virus/trojan game is becoming significant? ----------------------------------------------- Booth Martin ResoDirect, ext. 528 BMartin@ResoDirect.com Booth@MartinVT.com http://www.MartinVT.com ----------------------------------------------- -------Original Message------- From: midrange-l@midrange.com Date: Tuesday, May 14, 2002 09:49:57 To: 'midrange-l@midrange.com' Subject: RE: When is a Windows network not a Windows network Don't count your chickens before they hatch.... Netscape is making a come back. Now that AOL's contract is expired with M$ they are looking at using the Gecko engine (NS and Mozilla) for their next release. Compuserve already uses it. I believe there was talk of others. -----Original Message----- From: Pete Hall [mailto:pbhall@ameritech.net] Sent: Monday, May 13, 2002 6:17 PM To: midrange-l@midrange.com Subject: RE: When is a Windows network not a Windows network At 14:17 05/12/2002, Joe Pluta wrote: >Choosing IE over Netscape, while distasteful, is >unfortunately the best choice - for now. I have to agree. NS support for CSS positioning and alignment is so buggy it simply isn't usable, and although I haven't tried with 6.2, the 6.0 event model was the same way. IE, although it is from the evil empire, gets the job done, and does support the DOM standard, pretty much as well as NS purports to. It has proprietary extensions, true enough, but you're not forced to use them. I work in a Microsoft shop, and I really appreciate the XML parsing capability built in to IE (wouldn't it be nice if it used XML4?). That may be proprietary (not really, but I'll concede the point), however it supports useful distributed production applications that couldn't be produced nearly as efficiently any other way. The one ray of hope is Opera. Hopefully in another year or so, it'll be a match for IE, and it's not restricted to Windows. NS, I'm afraid, has deteriorated to the point where it is no longer a factor. Pete Hall pbhall@ameritech.net http://www.ameritech.net/users/pbhall/index.html
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