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There is a solution: var oEmbed = document.getElementById("myMidi"); oEmbed.setAttribute("src", "newfile.mid")
[QUOTE=MidiMagic;403008]Even if you could do that, Firefox closes so quickly that nobody could read it. If somebody clicks the X, they want to close the program now. They don't want it to do any more. If IE can do it, it is because IE has a nonstandard extension to web …
That's because OBJECT is official XHTML tag for embedding objects and old-school EMBED was used in old browsers but supported in almost all current ones too. Now EMBED is included in HTML5 specs but OBJECT tag on was excluded, so the things have changed.
Hello. It is possible to do that you need using Windows 2003 Enterprise edition. Our company has developed a product to do exactly that you are looking for - [URL="http://voynex.com/wmsbilling"]MediaGateway[/URL]. It is designed to perform media files access management. [URL="http://voynex.com/wmsbilling"]MediaGateway[/URL] is an authorization plug-in for WMS 9 Series performing users …
I also recommend to use ATL and WTL if you are programming for MS Windows platform.
it is possible to open the window w/o scrollbars, toolbars, etc but it has to be based on the user action! Not automatically.
it is possible to do almost the same things using embedded windows media player 9 and above
Yes, name attribute is deprecated in XHTML
Yes, it is not possible to modify rules in the CSS file, but you can modify the style of the DOM node.
The End.
Voynex