SOLUTION: Browser reading nonexistent code

Paul Hollands p.j.hollands at lboro.ac.uk
Wed Jun 5 05:18:58 EDT 1996


If your running Windows, then an easier way is to set up a recorder macro so
that you can clear down your caches with one key stoke. (I was clearing my
caches like this rather than pressing reload.) I got so frustrated I went
back to Netscape 1.2 however. Other benefits include my 8 Mb machine not
grinding to a halt every time I want to use my browser.

Are you Netscape 3 guys running 64 Mb twin P120s or what?

At 13:38 04/06/96 -0700, Leon James wrote:
>Thanks to Bill Crosbie for clearing up a mystery that has been very 
>frustrating:
>
>"Because of the way Netscape Navigator 2.0 and 2.01 handle Daylight Saving
>Time, certain pages that change content more frequently than once an hour
>may not load properly. The problem occurs when the user tries to reload the
>page. If the page has changed in the last hour, Navigator, during Daylight
>Saving Time, will not load the new page."
>
>My solution in that case is to change the name of the file -- 
>temporarily, so as to see the changes.  Then I change the name back and 
>hope to be able to see it the next day.
>
>leon james
>
>       	        +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>	         **    Dr. Leon James, Prof. of Psychology, Univ. of Hawaii
>		  **   http://www.soc.hawaii.edu/club/leonj/leonpsy/leon.html
>		    **  "Thoughts are from affections." E. Swedenborg AE1146
>                      *******************************************************
>
>
>
****************************************
Paul Hollands <p.j.hollands at lboro.ac.uk>
Internet Information Officer
Loughborough University UK 01509 222373
http://www.lboro.ac.uk/info/training/e_sources_main.html




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