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 Posted by Stan McCann on 01/08/06 18:55 
"Alan J. Flavell" <flavell@physics.gla.ac.uk> wrote in 
news:Pine.WNT.4.64.0601061117280.1596@ZORIN:  
 
>  
> On Fri, 6 Jan 2006, Marian Heddesheimer wrote: 
>  
>> There are some websites that don't work without flash, but I think 
>> they are not worth installing the plugin ;-) 
 
I totally agree.  I use Flash during the time that I introduce it to 
my students and must check their work.  Once in a while, I'll copy an 
URL from FireFox and paste it into Maxthon to see Flash and/or other 
stuff that I don't use on a regular basis.  
 
>> On the other hand, you will find a lot of nice online games or 
>> interactive thingies that are done in flash, so I believe it's 
>> worth installing the plugin if you are not a purely text-based 
>> user.  
>  
> Well, after too many instances of my laptop being brought to an  
> uncontrollable crawl by commercial web sites which insisted on  
> dragging their way through a non-optional flash video before one 
> could get any access to their normal content, I de-installed the 
> flash plugin. 
 
Non-optional splash pages usually will get me to find another site 
right away.  On the other hand, I've seen some pretty good stuff done 
with Flash.  
 
> If there was a way of getting a prompt and being able to say "no  
> thanks" to the browser when unsolicited flash content was offered, I 
> might be willing to re-enable it.  I haven't found an option like 
> that yet. 
 
Look into some of the FF extensions.  I believe there is one that 
allows Flash enable/disable on the fly.  Browse with Flash off, then 
turn it on if you want to see some Flash goodie.  I'm not sure if 
there is anything for Mozilla.  
 
--  
Stan McCann "Uncle Pirate" http://stanmccann.us/pirate.html 
Webmaster/Computer Center Manager, NMSU at Alamogordo 
http://alamo.nmsu.edu/  There are 10 kinds of people. 
Those that understand binary and those that don't.
 
  
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