LOL ... Well, BG has enough problems without being in a conspiracy with
Moss. :-)
(Or is that Moss has enough problems with out being in collusion with BG. Oh
well...)
Greg
broken '78 B
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Dodd, Kelvin [mailto:doddk@mossmotors.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2001 1:04 PM
> To: 'Greg Bass'; 'MG List'
> Subject: RE: Moss web site
>
>
> Greg:
>
> Thanks for the explanation. It's nice to have a
> knowledgable person
> jump in to defuse a possible conspiracy theory. There is
> definitely no tie
> between Moss Motors and Bill Gates.
>
> Thanks also to those who are posting comments about the
> Moss Motors
> website. Your feedback is appreciated and will be forwarded
> to the folks
> supporting the web site.
>
>
> Kelvin Dodd
> Ventura CA
>
>
> > In response to the issue with the Moss website and it working
> > with some
> > browsers and not others. I don't know about the rest of you but I do
> > professional web development for several companies. The
> > problems you see
> > usually arise when either insufficent cross browser testing
> is done or
> > simply because of the wide variety of browsers available make
> > it too time
> > consuming to do the testing at all. As a general rule most
> > sites are NOT
> > targeted to work only with MS IE. But due to the fact that IE
> > is much more
> > forgiving in the quality of the code written, things that
> > work in IE may not
> > work with other browsers. Netscape for example requires very
> > good code to be
> > written with virtually no mistakes. In a nutshell sloppy code
> > might work in
> > IE but will not work in NS. Good? Bad? It's not my intent to
> > say one way or
> > the other. But the issue is not IE vs NS (or some other
> > browser) it is more
> > a matter of writing quality code in the first place.
> >
> > Greg
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