On Wed, March 14, 2007 6:22 am, Seak, Teng-Fong wrote:
> Richard Lynch wrote:
>> I wonder if the changes that allow for Interntional domain names,
>> with
>> various Unicode characters I don't even know how to get out of my
>> keyboard, *ALSO* made _ suddenly be legal...
>>
>> Just a hypothesis.
>>
Richard Lynch wrote:
> I wonder if the changes that allow for Interntional domain names, with
> various Unicode characters I don't even know how to get out of my
> keyboard, *ALSO* made _ suddenly be legal...
>
> Just a hypothesis.
>
> I gotta say that Apache being current on RFCs and IE being brok
On Tue, March 13, 2007 1:56 pm, Yannick Warnier wrote:
>> > According to RFC1033 (
>> > http://www.camtp.uni-mb.si/books/Internet-Book/DNS_NameFormat.html
>> ),
>> > underscores are forbidden in DNS names, including subdomains.
>
>>
>> Yeah, meaning that the program where you created the subdomain
Le lundi 12 mars 2007 à 18:04 +0100, Tijnema ! a écrit :
> On 3/12/07, Doctorrock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > 2007/3/12, Yannick Warnier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > >
> > > The problem wasn't quite there. The 304 response was correct and didn't
> > > really cause a problem in IE7.
> > >
> > > I
Perhaps try sending various no-cache headers and a Date-Modified with
the current time-stamp in it.
You never know with IE what's actually going to work, and you could
mess up other browsers, though, so do lots of browser tests...
On Sun, March 11, 2007 6:01 pm, Yannick Warnier wrote:
> Hello,
>
On 3/12/07, Doctorrock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
2007/3/12, Yannick Warnier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> The problem wasn't quite there. The 304 response was correct and didn't
> really cause a problem in IE7.
>
> In fact, the problem was somewhere else. As mentioned by someone in the
> PHP doc com
2007/3/12, Yannick Warnier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
The problem wasn't quite there. The 304 response was correct and didn't
really cause a problem in IE7.
In fact, the problem was somewhere else. As mentioned by someone in the
PHP doc comments (http://be.php.net/manual/en/ref.session.php#64125 ),
I
The problem wasn't quite there. The 304 response was correct and didn't
really cause a problem in IE7.
In fact, the problem was somewhere else. As mentioned by someone in the
PHP doc comments (http://be.php.net/manual/en/ref.session.php#64125 ),
IE is the only one to reject urls of the likes of
ht
Hello,
One of my clients is currently having a problem when logging into one of
my site.
Investigating further (because it works with Firefox with his login/pass
from my machine), it appears the problem is caused for an obscure reason
when IE7 requests the page and obviously does a "conditional GE
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