This site is slow and that sucks.

aryk29, once you are logged in, the speed of the board has nothing to do with your need to log in again. Ya gotta use cookies, dude.

I would like to suggest that they create a new window when you choose a thread. That way you don’t have to navigate back from the thread contents to the thread list. So all thread lists go in window “A” (whether they were generated by clicking a link, selecting a drop-box value, or created through search). All thread contents go to window “B”. It would take a little while to get used to having two browser windows open at once, but I think it would be MUCH more efficient, both from the client side AND the server side.

This is why God invented the “command-click.” Alternatively, you can press the right mouse button, and select “Open In New Window” from the popup menu.

“Ask The Guy Who’s Happy With SDMB’s Page Loading Time”

ccwaterback you might like to use a tabbed browser like Mozilla or Opera. A tab is much like a new window.

With Mozilla, for example, you could have the thread list of a forum up, and then middle-button click the threads you want to read. They will then each open in their own new tabs. While those threads are loading, you can go to the next forum in the main tab.

AH HA!!! Nice. I am going to have to start working that way. I think it would be better if that was the default operation though. Saves a ton of reloads from the server by the teeming masses.

I see on problem here. It always creates a new window, it doesn’t over-write the last “B” window you had open. The problem that’s going to arise here is, posting responses to the wrong thread. Oh well, I guess no one can protect us from ourselves.

I was thinking this same thing just the other day.

Okay, okay, I turned cookies on! Now it seems to be working.

I used to think all cookies were evil :eek: :smack: :smiley:

Except my mother’s chocolate chip cookies :drool:

You can also open your click in a new window by pressing shift as you click.

Lynn Bodoni,

Actually, it’s not Hardin’s speculation on the commons. It’s Say’s Law (as in Jean Baptiste Say):

Link to boring to some people Economics History thing