Den evige krigen av de som liker Opera, Mozilla og IE begynner kanskje å bli litt gammel her på forumet, men jeg fortsetter min propaganda jeg! Copy & Paste fra http://webstandards.org/act/campaign/buc/
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Alle her har nok mer enn nok kraft til å kjøre Mozillla. Eneste gangen jeg noensine har merka at Mozilla gikk litt tregt var igår når jeg rippa et album til mp3.
What can I do?
You might consider upgrading to any of the following browsers. Doing so will improve your web experience, enabling you to use and view sites as their creators intended.
You might consider upgrading to any of the following browsers. Doing so will improve your web experience, enabling you to use and view sites as their creators intended.
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Mozilla
Mozilla 1.0 is the browser built by the people who build Gecko, the rendering core of modern Netscape browsers, the IBM Web Browser mentioned below, and several others. No browser does a better job of standards compliance, and Mozilla also includes all the usual add-ons like mail, news and chat.
Mozilla 1.0 is the browser built by the people who build Gecko, the rendering core of modern Netscape browsers, the IBM Web Browser mentioned below, and several others. No browser does a better job of standards compliance, and Mozilla also includes all the usual add-ons like mail, news and chat.
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Opera 6
Opera supports many key web standards and a variety of computing platforms. Opera 6 for Windows, released 13 November 2001, is the company ’s flagship (and most advanced) browser. Its lead designer was the inventor and co-author of the CSS1 standard. The browser, which works well even on older PCs with limited power, is available free of charge. A pay version is also available. Opera supports Windows, Linux (beta, but works very well), and Mac OS (Version 5.0), and will soon support the OS/2, EPOC, and BeOS platforms.
Important: Unlike the Mozilla, IE and Netscape browsers mentioned above, Opera does not yet offer full support for the W3C DOM. Without getting too technical, what that means is that some standards-based web page behaviors that work well in Mozilla, IE, and Netscape, may not work at all in Opera. We have every reason to believe that Opera Software is working hard to improve its browser’s DOM support. Until they succeed, however, the browser is an excellent choice for reading news and informational sites, but may not be the best choice for viewing advanced transactional sites that make use of the W3C DOM.
Opera supports many key web standards and a variety of computing platforms. Opera 6 for Windows, released 13 November 2001, is the company ’s flagship (and most advanced) browser. Its lead designer was the inventor and co-author of the CSS1 standard. The browser, which works well even on older PCs with limited power, is available free of charge. A pay version is also available. Opera supports Windows, Linux (beta, but works very well), and Mac OS (Version 5.0), and will soon support the OS/2, EPOC, and BeOS platforms.
Important: Unlike the Mozilla, IE and Netscape browsers mentioned above, Opera does not yet offer full support for the W3C DOM. Without getting too technical, what that means is that some standards-based web page behaviors that work well in Mozilla, IE, and Netscape, may not work at all in Opera. We have every reason to believe that Opera Software is working hard to improve its browser’s DOM support. Until they succeed, however, the browser is an excellent choice for reading news and informational sites, but may not be the best choice for viewing advanced transactional sites that make use of the W3C DOM.
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