kalifaye
11-28-2001, 02:55 AM
hello people,
I require assistance from you fine folks. I have a machine that is currently triple booting ME, 2000 pro, and Xp pro (don't ask why http://www.PCGuide.com/ubb/eek.gif )
I understand that internet explorer under xp doesn't support java, so when i click on any link that requires the use of the javascript engine, there is an error on the page. fine. my problem now is that IE under 2000 is doing the same thing as xp. previous pages and links that worked fine under 2k prior to installing xp will not work now. now, the status bar displays javascript error. all internet options under IE 2k (v 5.00) has been reset to default settings. same problems. IE ME (v 5.00) is working fine. Does anyone have any ideas as to what's going on?? is there anyway to get 2k back to working the way it used to?? thank you in advance people...
additional information: 2000 and xp are not on a shared partition.
------------------
Rule 1: The computer is always right.
Rule 2: If you think the computer is at fault, see rule 1.
[This message has been edited by kalifaye (edited 11-28-2001).]
I require assistance from you fine folks. I have a machine that is currently triple booting ME, 2000 pro, and Xp pro (don't ask why http://www.PCGuide.com/ubb/eek.gif )
I understand that internet explorer under xp doesn't support java, so when i click on any link that requires the use of the javascript engine, there is an error on the page. fine. my problem now is that IE under 2000 is doing the same thing as xp. previous pages and links that worked fine under 2k prior to installing xp will not work now. now, the status bar displays javascript error. all internet options under IE 2k (v 5.00) has been reset to default settings. same problems. IE ME (v 5.00) is working fine. Does anyone have any ideas as to what's going on?? is there anyway to get 2k back to working the way it used to?? thank you in advance people...
additional information: 2000 and xp are not on a shared partition.
------------------
Rule 1: The computer is always right.
Rule 2: If you think the computer is at fault, see rule 1.
[This message has been edited by kalifaye (edited 11-28-2001).]