Ал Ал ом Бл Ал Ал млл лм Бл ВлАллллпАл ммм Бл мм млллмАлппплАл Ал лл А ллБл Бл лл БллппплмБллппАлмммп АлАллл лл А ллБл Бл лл Бл АлБл Алм АмлпплАл Ал пл ллп Аллл пллмАлпллллпБл АлллпАлммлВАл Ал Outbreak Magazine Issue #9 - Article 2 of 14 '~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~' -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- You may already know about this by Michael Murphy When first run Mozilla prompts you on whether or not you would like to enable 'Quick Launch' a feature of which core elements (I assume) in the browser are stored in memory for quicker access at a later time. This made me think of Internet Explorer since it has an unusally short time-span between the execution and it's appearence on the screen. Then I remembered something. Microsoft had integrated Internet Explorer into it's operating system thus giving them an advantage over the other browsers whose componets were not already loaded into memory. Would ripping Internet explorer's componets from Microsoft's Windows break any license agreement or would it be concerned as reverse engineering. Who cares. Any how I think options are good. Maybe Microsoft will adopt this kind of attitude one day.