>>>Yes, I have seen other solutions, but not a universal one. I've asked Michel for a fix before. Nothing easy.
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>>Up until recently, Michael was mainly interested in making the UT work in Internet Explorer. Other browsers were quite secondary.
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>>Recently, he has shown an increased interest in compatibility - mainly with Mozilla and Opera, I think. The reasons are obvious.
>
>Morning Hilmar,
>
>If you are referring to the recent security problems, I agree - in part. My argument was his inclusion of various
non-Microsoft categories might require a browser other than IE if he was to attract any interest in those forums. Asking users to participate in a Linux discussion, and forcing them to use IE to do it, seemed just a bit ridiculous to me. What is the next step - install the .NET runtimes to login?
Hehe, at the Cisco Academy, our course materials work best in Internet Explorer. I think they have added compatibility checks for another browser, but I can't remember if it was NetScape or Mozilla.
The funny part is that that includes the UNIX/Windows course, which, quite logically, uses the same structure of Web pages (both the course material and the exams are accessed over www).
Difference in opinions hath cost many millions of lives: for instance, whether flesh be bread, or bread be flesh; whether whistling be a vice or a virtue; whether it be better to kiss a post, or throw it into the fire... (from Gulliver's Travels)