The "Freeola Customer Forum" forum, which includes Retro Game Reviews, has been archived and is now read-only. You cannot post here or create a new thread or review on this forum.
I know that onload and onunload ones are generally blocked regardless, but user clicked ones may vary depending on the code used on the web site (for example, onmouseover, onmouseout, onmouseup and onmousedown are blocked, I think, while onclick will work as long as only one pop-up is presented.
I expect it is detailed on the MSDN / IE / SP2 web site somewhere, I'll take a look when I get the chance.
Ahh, it may also be down to the filter level, as it seems I have mine set to high, though I'm not sure if that was the default, or if I altered it.
I expect I altered mine, so if you're not getting a block, don't have the site under exceptions and haven't changed your filter level, you may be ok with how you have it now.
EDIT: Oh, and I know the availability chart thing is a bit too wide in Firefox. I'm not getting enough money for this to deal with stupid things like that, so it stays.
Just noticed Opera displays the title as normal, but adds the URL at the top of the page, I like that method.
On a side note, XP SP2 prevents that pop-up from displaying first off, asking the user to allow pop-ups first (which can be annoying), so you may want to consider a standard page layout calendar too.
On a side note, I really like that web site, nice work.
Although I may be wrong, I just checked on the Radiotimes website, and it looks as though, for a popup box, the titlebar displays the address of the website, followed by the text between the
You could check this by increasing the width of the popup.
Click on the 'view availability chart' - in my IE I don't get the title string, just the URL. Works fine in Firefox.
I can code a