Submitted by WanderingOak on November 15, 2007 - 05:14.
I am another individual who does not like the 'leapfrogging' back to the top of the page in IE 6.0 and XP. Whenever I open an article and start scrolling down to read, the browser 'leaps' back up to the top of the page. The back arrow behaves the same, forcing me back to the top of the previous page. That is rather annoying to say the least. However, the site will not even load at all in Netscape 7.0 (my browser of choice, compared to IE 6.0), which is worse than annoying. While your site does have good content, and I am allowed to post coments without a long, rigorous registration process (a major advantage), these browser quirks cause me to visit less often than I would otherwise.
I know these aren't exactly the 'latest and greatest' browsers, but they are what I have on my work computer and there are no plans on updating the browsers anytime soon. I use FireFox on OSX 'Tiger' at home, but haven't had the chance to view your site from home to let you know how it performs there.
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browser support
Submitted by WanderingOak on November 15, 2007 - 05:14.
I am another individual who does not like the 'leapfrogging' back to the top of the page in IE 6.0 and XP. Whenever I open an article and start scrolling down to read, the browser 'leaps' back up to the top of the page. The back arrow behaves the same, forcing me back to the top of the previous page. That is rather annoying to say the least. However, the site will not even load at all in Netscape 7.0 (my browser of choice, compared to IE 6.0), which is worse than annoying. While your site does have good content, and I am allowed to post coments without a long, rigorous registration process (a major advantage), these browser quirks cause me to visit less often than I would otherwise.
I know these aren't exactly the 'latest and greatest' browsers, but they are what I have on my work computer and there are no plans on updating the browsers anytime soon. I use FireFox on OSX 'Tiger' at home, but haven't had the chance to view your site from home to let you know how it performs there.