If you have to run a Windows box you should be using something like ZoneAlarm Pro which renames executables as something innocuous in POP & IMAP email. And you can add stuff to the list of undesirables.
The free AVG does this as well for OE5 (not sure if this works on OE6). Between them there's nothing getting through, so I can continue to be lazy and keep my personal email on OE6. Eudora was amazingly slow on that box so I reverted.
(offtopic) Why do Americans mis-spell only aluminium like that? Why leave out the other elements with similar endings? Why mangle sulphur but not phosphorus?
I have (temporarily) the Gregorian II CD. This plays badly in my portable player, skips a lot. In a Linux box it could not mount, same in a DVD drive on Win2000. In a slow burner I can hear it repeatedly trying to read before it gives up.
There is a very visible silver band 5mm in from the outside edge of the disk, so it's clearly been messed with.
The printed stuff does not have the CD Digital audio logo, but the jewel case does. Maybe they forgot that?
This is going back to the (major chain) store today for a refund.
Not quite so simple. I may start with a URL ending in.co.uk for a hardware supplier site, but then it jumps into.com and.com.tw, and so on, while still on basically the same site. So disabling all the third party cookies is not effective, or at least compromises usability.
Is it possible, from examining the style of the source, to identify the page creation tool which produced this poor code? Clearly it should not be a soft hyphen. It's not the browser at fault so much as the editor.
Region free and auto-setting consumer grade players are readily available in the UK. Mine was £150 (about US$250), plays everything so far.
Can you really not buy them in the US?
If you have to run a Windows box you should be using something like ZoneAlarm Pro which renames executables as something innocuous in POP & IMAP email. And you can add stuff to the list of undesirables.
The free AVG does this as well for OE5 (not sure if this works on OE6). Between them there's nothing getting through, so I can continue to be lazy and keep my personal email on OE6. Eudora was amazingly slow on that box so I reverted.
(offtopic) Why do Americans mis-spell only aluminium like that? Why leave out the other elements with similar endings? Why mangle sulphur but not phosphorus?
SO true.
I have (temporarily) the Gregorian II CD. This plays badly in my portable player, skips a lot. In a Linux box it could not mount, same in a DVD drive on Win2000. In a slow burner I can hear it repeatedly trying to read before it gives up.
There is a very visible silver band 5mm in from the outside edge of the disk, so it's clearly been messed with.
The printed stuff does not have the CD Digital audio logo, but the jewel case does. Maybe they forgot that?
This is going back to the (major chain) store today for a refund.
Not quite so simple. I may start with a URL ending in .co.uk for a hardware supplier site, but then it jumps into .com and .com.tw, and so on, while still on basically the same site. So disabling all the third party cookies is not effective, or at least compromises usability.
This may not be quite so obvious to US users.
no you haven't, they are ferrite magnet powder dispersed in rubber.
Is it possible, from examining the style of the source, to identify the page creation tool which produced this poor code? Clearly it should not be a soft hyphen. It's not the browser at fault so much as the editor.
Bo Hansson did that in the '70's, and very nice it was too. May be out on CD somewhere, otherwise I'll have to post it on audiogalaxy.
Region free and auto-setting consumer grade players are readily available in the UK. Mine was £150 (about US$250), plays everything so far. Can you really not buy them in the US?