Ahh, that's better. NS4 should be a little more graceful when it comes to dealing with my page. Still looks like crap, but I think I know how to deal with that. Oh man, it's late already. Geez, how come coding takes so long?
Wednesday, September 03, 2003 at 16:28:13 (UTC)
Dude! I get a "A script on this page is making your browser run slowly. Do you wish to abort the script?" message in IE6 on your page, if I leave it running for a while.
Shoot, I can't recreate it. What were your settings?
QYV
Thursday, September 04, 2003 at 19:25:13 (UTC)
I unfortunately have not been able to reproduce the alert message either.
However, consider this: "Clouds are made of a lot of water. A lot of water is heavy. Clouds are heavy." [-Slashdot]
It would seem that people need to restate the obvious sometimes. I think the real news here is that a meteorologist is dumb enough to be "amazed" by her findings. Maybe next FoxNews will have an exclusive report revealing that the sun is hot enough to melt a lot of things, including elephants.
Well, I think it throws a lot of people off because clouds float in the atmosphere. People associate floating in atmosphere with "light" but it really all comes down to density and buoyancy - not mass or weight (Fg).
Wednesday, September 03, 2003 at 16:28:13 (UTC)
Dude! I get a "A script on this page is making your browser run slowly. Do you wish to abort the script?" message in IE6 on your page, if I leave it running for a while.
In other news, don't forget to vote.
Hwanchilada
Wednesday, September 03, 2003 at 16:51:22 (UTC)
Shoot, I can't recreate it. What were your settings?
QYV
Thursday, September 04, 2003 at 19:25:13 (UTC)
I unfortunately have not been able to reproduce the alert message either.
However, consider this: "Clouds are made of a lot of water. A lot of water is heavy. Clouds are heavy." [-Slashdot]
It would seem that people need to restate the obvious sometimes. I think the real news here is that a meteorologist is dumb enough to be "amazed" by her findings. Maybe next FoxNews will have an exclusive report revealing that the sun is hot enough to melt a lot of things, including elephants.
Hwanchilada
Sunday, September 07, 2003 at 13:18:56 (UTC)
Well, I think it throws a lot of people off because clouds float in the atmosphere. People associate floating in atmosphere with "light" but it really all comes down to density and buoyancy - not mass or weight (Fg).
Speaking of the sun, there's water there too.
QYV