Anyone has any idea why the Kcata Trip Planner is Windows/IE only, despite the fact that it is a server side application: http://68.166.86.20/etripplanner/
Just curious.
-- As a boy I jumped through Windows, as a man I play with Penguins.
On 11/25/05, Arthur Pemberton pemboa@gmail.com wrote:
Anyone has any idea why the Kcata Trip Planner is Windows/IE only, despite the fact that it is a server side application: http://68.166.86.20/etripplanner/
Just curious.
Overpaid retarded consultants? It takes extra effort to make an application not cross browser these days.
--Ian
On Saturday 26 November 2005 01:45, Arthur Pemberton wrote:
Anyone has any idea why the Kcata Trip Planner is Windows/IE only, despite the fact that it is a server side application: http://68.166.86.20/etripplanner/
Seems to work decent if you spoof IE's user agent
On Sun, 27 Nov 2005, Luke-Jr wrote:
On Saturday 26 November 2005 01:45, Arthur Pemberton wrote:
Anyone has any idea why the Kcata Trip Planner is Windows/IE only, despite the fact that it is a server side application: http://68.166.86.20/etripplanner/
Seems to work decent if you spoof IE's user agent
I'd say the person who wrote the planner may had no idea how restrictive this application really is...
I tried a little "MS Front Page" web page builder script from my web hosting service and it did what you describe. It made a web page with a script checking for the browser and possible active-x functions. I suppose it would work with IE, but for the internet at large, it was so broken, I uninstalled it.
I guess it was a web page building application for someone's senior class project and never really made to work for everyone.