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Browser Issues with Websites

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  • H Henry Minute

    Curse you Vluggen!!! :) I really hate it when people use logic in the lounge. Your points are valid and well made and I shall retire hurt unless a flash of inspiration occurs. :-D

    Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”

    D Offline
    D Offline
    Dave Buhl
    wrote on last edited by
    #29

    How bout this. Create a pseudo browser that looks at the meta-data of a page, if it is marked as created for it opens the page in a tab with the correct browser embedded. Give the user the option to identify their preferred browser for unmarked pages. You could provide a link to the download pages for each of the popular browsers to download them when needed. Basically just a big ole wrapper :)

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    • F Fabio Franco

      Eddy Vluggen wrote:

      Worse, what if a site is designed for IE/FF - what add-on would a mothership use in that case? And what if that site was compatible with Chrome, but it wasn't marked as "designed for". Would you disallow that engine? Would that be "fair" to give Microsoft a competitive advantage over Google?

      1 - Every add-in has the potential to be customizable by featuring a settings form. So, if the site is designed for two different sites you can set a "preferable engine". 2 - You can simply not use the Add-In if you always want to keep using Chrome engine. 3 - In the Add-In settings you could always set which sites you want to use with which engine.

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      L Offline
      Lost User
      wrote on last edited by
      #30

      Fabio Franco wrote:

      1 - Every add-in has the potential to be customizable by featuring a settings form. So, if the site is designed for two different sites you can set a "preferable engine".

      ..if, and only if, you get the permission to use that engine. You won't be able to deliver a FF-addin without the written consent of the creators of FF. That's copyrighted material, and I doubt that they'll give away their investment.

      Fabio Franco wrote:

      2 - You can simply not use the Add-In if you always want to keep using Chrome engine.

      It's simpeler to use Chrome as is. Not to mention that a mothership-browser would be slower than IE, since it needs to load all those engines.

      Fabio Franco wrote:

      3 - In the Add-In settings you could always set which sites you want to use with which engine.

      The EU will certainly love that! How are you going to determine who's on top in that add-in list? I'm not enthousiastic about the idea since it's comparable to hosting Google or Bing in a frame, and then selling that as a search-engine.

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      • M M dHatter

        Ok, i was just thinking on a way to resolve making websites that work for any browser. Then, i had an idea, why not make a browser that can load instances of other browsers within it. Then a website can just specify what browser it was designed for. i.e Then when the custom browser gets the page it just looks for an instance of that app and loads it into a tab window. Anyone got any ideas? I know, I know your saying to load a whole bunch of versions on a client machine?... exactly!

        "I do not know with what weapons World War 3 will be fought, but World War 4 will be fought with sticks and stones." Einstein "Few things are harder to put up with than the annoyance of a good example." Mark Twain

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        S Offline
        Sterling Camden independent consultant
        wrote on last edited by
        #31

        Check out http://www.lunascape.tv In the Lunascape browser, you can switch between the three major rendering engines (Trident = IE, Gecko = FF, WebKet = Chrome or Safari). You can configure Lunascape to always use a certain engine on a specific site or page. Some sort of autodiscovery tag like you've outlined would be a nice complement to it, though.

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        • L Lost User

          Fabio Franco wrote:

          1 - Every add-in has the potential to be customizable by featuring a settings form. So, if the site is designed for two different sites you can set a "preferable engine".

          ..if, and only if, you get the permission to use that engine. You won't be able to deliver a FF-addin without the written consent of the creators of FF. That's copyrighted material, and I doubt that they'll give away their investment.

          Fabio Franco wrote:

          2 - You can simply not use the Add-In if you always want to keep using Chrome engine.

          It's simpeler to use Chrome as is. Not to mention that a mothership-browser would be slower than IE, since it needs to load all those engines.

          Fabio Franco wrote:

          3 - In the Add-In settings you could always set which sites you want to use with which engine.

          The EU will certainly love that! How are you going to determine who's on top in that add-in list? I'm not enthousiastic about the idea since it's comparable to hosting Google or Bing in a frame, and then selling that as a search-engine.

          F Offline
          F Offline
          Fabio Franco
          wrote on last edited by
          #32

          Eddy Vluggen wrote:

          Fabio Franco wrote: 1 - Every add-in has the potential to be customizable by featuring a settings form. So, if the site is designed for two different sites you can set a "preferable engine". ..if, and only if, you get the permission to use that engine. You won't be able to deliver a FF-addin without the written consent of the creators of FF. That's copyrighted material, and I doubt that they'll give away their investment.

          Isn't that already done for IE, in the IE Tab add-in for firefox? Don't think there is any legal implications in that, if there was, IE Tab would've been long gone.

          Eddy Vluggen wrote:

          Fabio Franco wrote: 2 - You can simply not use the Add-In if you always want to keep using Chrome engine. It's simpeler to use Chrome as is. Not to mention that a mothership-browser would be slower than IE, since it needs to load all those engines.

          Yes, in the startup maybe, but I think it's worth the initial long load time for having an all-around browser.

          Eddy Vluggen wrote:

          Fabio Franco wrote: 3 - In the Add-In settings you could always set which sites you want to use with which engine. The EU will certainly love that! How are you going to determine who's on top in that add-in list? I'm not enthousiastic about the idea since it's comparable to hosting Google or Bing in a frame, and then selling that as a search-engine.

          This would be a local setting, on the user machine. The user determines which sites are prefered by which engine. No problem with that. Take a look on the IE Tab Add-In for firefox, and you'll know what I mean. It works great!

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          • F Fabio Franco

            Eddy Vluggen wrote:

            Fabio Franco wrote: 1 - Every add-in has the potential to be customizable by featuring a settings form. So, if the site is designed for two different sites you can set a "preferable engine". ..if, and only if, you get the permission to use that engine. You won't be able to deliver a FF-addin without the written consent of the creators of FF. That's copyrighted material, and I doubt that they'll give away their investment.

            Isn't that already done for IE, in the IE Tab add-in for firefox? Don't think there is any legal implications in that, if there was, IE Tab would've been long gone.

            Eddy Vluggen wrote:

            Fabio Franco wrote: 2 - You can simply not use the Add-In if you always want to keep using Chrome engine. It's simpeler to use Chrome as is. Not to mention that a mothership-browser would be slower than IE, since it needs to load all those engines.

            Yes, in the startup maybe, but I think it's worth the initial long load time for having an all-around browser.

            Eddy Vluggen wrote:

            Fabio Franco wrote: 3 - In the Add-In settings you could always set which sites you want to use with which engine. The EU will certainly love that! How are you going to determine who's on top in that add-in list? I'm not enthousiastic about the idea since it's comparable to hosting Google or Bing in a frame, and then selling that as a search-engine.

            This would be a local setting, on the user machine. The user determines which sites are prefered by which engine. No problem with that. Take a look on the IE Tab Add-In for firefox, and you'll know what I mean. It works great!

            L Offline
            L Offline
            Lost User
            wrote on last edited by
            #33

            Fabio Franco wrote:

            Isn't that already done for IE, in the IE Tab add-in for firefox? Don't think there is any legal implications in that, if there was, IE Tab would've been long gone.

            No, it's not "done for IE". FireFox didn't need their permission, since IE is available as a component on the system. In other words, the creators of the IE Add-in tab needn't the distribution-rights to IE, since it's already installed on the system. Sorry, but this is a non-solvable legal problem :sigh:

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            • M M dHatter

              Ok, i was just thinking on a way to resolve making websites that work for any browser. Then, i had an idea, why not make a browser that can load instances of other browsers within it. Then a website can just specify what browser it was designed for. i.e Then when the custom browser gets the page it just looks for an instance of that app and loads it into a tab window. Anyone got any ideas? I know, I know your saying to load a whole bunch of versions on a client machine?... exactly!

              "I do not know with what weapons World War 3 will be fought, but World War 4 will be fought with sticks and stones." Einstein "Few things are harder to put up with than the annoyance of a good example." Mark Twain

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              E Offline
              ewshaffer
              wrote on last edited by
              #34

              All you need is to visit the wrong site once.... <head> <meta name="designedfor" content="my_custom_malware_downloader" /> <meta name="designedforversion" content="2.0" /> </head>

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              • L Lost User

                Fabio Franco wrote:

                Isn't that already done for IE, in the IE Tab add-in for firefox? Don't think there is any legal implications in that, if there was, IE Tab would've been long gone.

                No, it's not "done for IE". FireFox didn't need their permission, since IE is available as a component on the system. In other words, the creators of the IE Add-in tab needn't the distribution-rights to IE, since it's already installed on the system. Sorry, but this is a non-solvable legal problem :sigh:

                M Offline
                M Offline
                Mike Marynowski
                wrote on last edited by
                #35

                FireFox is open source...licensed under GPL. Problem solved.

                L 1 Reply Last reply
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                • L Lost User

                  Fabio Franco wrote:

                  Isn't that already done for IE, in the IE Tab add-in for firefox? Don't think there is any legal implications in that, if there was, IE Tab would've been long gone.

                  No, it's not "done for IE". FireFox didn't need their permission, since IE is available as a component on the system. In other words, the creators of the IE Add-in tab needn't the distribution-rights to IE, since it's already installed on the system. Sorry, but this is a non-solvable legal problem :sigh:

                  M Offline
                  M Offline
                  Mike Marynowski
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #36

                  Oh...and so is Chrome...so, you basically have your three main engines taken care of (IE, WebKit, Gecko). If your site doesn't work with one of those, you did something wrong.

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                  • M Mike Marynowski

                    FireFox is open source...licensed under GPL. Problem solved.

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                    L Offline
                    Lost User
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #37

                    Mike Marynowski wrote:

                    FireFox is open source...licensed under GPL. Problem solved.

                    "Open Source" doesn't mean that everyone can do with the code as they like.

                    M 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • L Lost User

                      Mike Marynowski wrote:

                      FireFox is open source...licensed under GPL. Problem solved.

                      "Open Source" doesn't mean that everyone can do with the code as they like.

                      M Offline
                      M Offline
                      Mike Marynowski
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #38

                      No, but the GPL does...as long as you also open source your code.

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