Daniel Taylor wrote: > > Uh, that is what POST and GET are for. Straight HTML. > I like Clay's idea of throwing an image over the button, that > can really clean up the look of a page (check NASDAQ for a sample > of a page that does it that way). You can also attempt some sort of user-agent detection. I'm not sure if Netscape says it will accept javascript even when it isn't enabled, but you could at least be able to turn off javascript for people who are using anything other than a `known' browser. (of course, there are those people who hack Lynx to tell the server that it's actually Netscape or IE, but they're weird ;-) There's a fair amount of information that gets passed back and forth during a normal HTTP GET/POST operation.. The trick is just figuring out how to read that information... -- _ _ _ _ _ ___ _ _ _ ___ _ _ __ Oxymoron: Bosnian / \/ \(_)| ' // ._\ / - \(_)/ ./| ' /(__ Cease-Fire \_||_/|_||_|_\\___/ \_-_/|_|\__\|_|_\ __) [ Mike Hicks | http://umn.edu/~hick0088/ | mailto:hick0088 at tc.umn.edu ] --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: tclug-list-unsubscribe at mn-linux.org For additional commands, e-mail: tclug-list-help at mn-linux.org