Post by Test UserI can't able to view the webpage properly.
Not an native English speaker.
"I can't view the web page properly."
Oh yes, "the web page", like there is only one of those in existence. Well,
if you want to keep it a secret then don't expect anyone other than you to
see what it has.
Oh yes, "properly", like that really details what not "proper" means.
Post by Test UserWebpage error details
User Agent: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 8.0; Windows NT 5.1; Trident/4.0)
Timestamp: Wed, 5 May 2010 06:24:25 UTC
Message: 'd' is null or not an object
Line: 1
Char: 4160
Code: 0
http://i2.social.microsoft.com/Forums/resources/tiny_mce/tiny_mce.js?cver=2.13.0068.3
URL:
http://i2.social.microsoft.com/Forums/resources/tiny_mce/tiny_mce.js?...
Oh, you want us to download a .js script file from that URL? No thanks.
You never did bother to give us the actual *originator* web page that you
visit or one which page the error is generated.
If you use anything to filter your web traffic then it is possible you are
filtering out content upon which the script in the web page relies or
expects to be there. For example, if you use InPrivate Filtering (available
in IE8), then it is possible that you have visited enough sites to get a
common one filtered out; e.g., filtering out Google Analytics means
filtering out their scripts from sites that use them to track stats on their
visitors. So turn off InPrivate Filtering, if enabled (normal installs only
let you temporarily active the InPrivate Filtering when you start an IE8
session but a registry hack can make IE8 turn it on everytime you load IE8).
Another example is using a replacement 'hosts' file, like the one available
from the MVPs site. If you block access to some content source on a web
page, like to a script that is located on a different server but which is
blocked in the hosts file, then the "home" web page you are visiting can't
get that content. You might be using some anti-spam, anti-phishing, link
scanning, or other security product that is blocking some of the content in
the visited web page. Some sites still use cookies to allow navigation
between their pages, like using a cookie on one page that you visit to
qualify you for loading a subsequent page linked from the first page. Some
sites use Referrer (datum provided by the web browser) when visiting a page
to qualify you to visit that page. They only want to let you see that next
web page if you were at a qualifying previous page. Some security products
will filter out the Referrer info published by your web browser to a site.
You will need to disable any hosts file (by replacing it temporarily),
disable any toolbars, or other security products you installed that modify
the web traffic that gets delivered to you to determine if that modification
is causing the problem.
Have you even purged the TIF folder and all cookies to ensure you aren't
trying to use outdated content? Some sites will change the format in which
they record data into a cookie but which is incompatible after they update
their site. Rather than see the format is no longer compatible, they get
back garbage info from the cookie. If you are trying to reuse old web page
content in the files in the TIF folder then they might not match up with the
current pages delivered from the web site which means, for example, that
scripts may not run correctly.
NOTE: IE8 is no longer in beta status. It went to released status over 16
months ago back in March 2009. For your future queries on the released
version(s), post to:
microsoft.public.internetexplorer.general
You were told this 2.5 hours ago and still you posted to the wrong
newsgroup. If you can't figure out the correct newsgroup to which you
should post, especially after being told the correct one, why would anyone
expect you to have the expertise or resolve to employ any solutions offered
here?
Bye.