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 | | Re: jump.cgi
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| (...) back (...) I have a 768 DSL connection, and I also get a 4 to 5 second delay. I've seen this a lot recently as well, but haven't mentioned it because I wanted to see what types of links do this. (...) On my computer (with IE 5.5) most of the (...) (26 years ago, 14-Aug-00, to lugnet.admin.general)
| | |  | | Re: jump.cgi
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| (...) That is soooo weird. The jump.cgi script runs inside of 1/100 second. On ISDN, you really shouldn't notice more than 1/10 extra added time. Anyone else seeing this strange behavior? BTW, what text shows in your browser's status window while (...) (26 years ago, 14-Aug-00, to lugnet.admin.general)
| | |  | | Re: jump.cgi
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| (...) 128k ISDN. I've tried loading the same page a few times - one with just a single 1.3k image on it and there is a noticable delay between hitting the link then being forwarded to the target URL. The image itself is in my cache and should be (...) (26 years ago, 14-Aug-00, to lugnet.admin.general)
| | |  | | Re: jump.cgi
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| (...) That's very strange. What kind of net connection are you on? Even on a modem, it shouldn't add more than 1/2 second. The jump.cgi script itself runs in the blink of an eye. --Todd (26 years ago, 14-Aug-00, to lugnet.admin.general)
| | |  | | Re: jump.cgi
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| (...) If so it was bad when I originally posted the message and bad again when I posted to this thread - some hour or two later. The delay isn't huge, but it is there. (26 years ago, 14-Aug-00, to lugnet.admin.general)
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