
There are certain compatibility issues in the world of
digital information technology. I think this is because of those damn developers and programmers trying their best to outdo one another! One developer tries to create a program well-suited to the needs of most people that the issue of interoperability with other developed programs is forgotten. This is even evident in the development and design of the pages of internet sites posted on cyberspace. A web developer answers to the whims of a web publisher that he unwittingly discovers a new development language. Then, another designer exploits this newly found language for his own purposes, and ends up creating a compatibility problem with a technique he has already done on the pages of the internet site he is designing. This coupled with an internet site browser he has forgotten to think of. After posting his internet site on the world wide web, other web developers and designers follow suit, proliferating stupidity in their wake!
For instance, have you experienced a page loading on your internet site browser, specifically Microsoft's Internet Explorer, that seems to change once the page fully loads on your internet site browser? Wasn't the first thing you've seen an unstyled actual version of the very page you are now viewing? Damn your eyes, they're not the problem, not at all! Instead of blaming your eye doctor for those prescription pills that seem not to work, listen first to what I have to say. The problem lies with the CSS codes within the damn page!
Yes, those damn
CSS codes! Since you're using Microsoft's Internet Explorer, expect much more of these occurrences, for you're using an internet site browser that I think is very much likely the joker among the pack of internet site browsers! I don't know what those programmer fools are doing back in the Microsoft base, but I think they're just biding their time so as to market their products as perfectly as possible. You see, in the world of capitalism, a product just seems to be perpetually developing, but, in fact, those manufacturers and developers could easily provide the people with a top-rated line of products and services! Anyway, if you're a web developer who uses CSS in styling the pages of the internet sites you're working on, I think the code below would come in handy! Yes, it'll functionally get rid of this damn flashing problem of unstyled versions of your styled pages with IE!
< - start of code - >
<link rel="stylesheet" href="styles.css" type="text/css" media="print" />
< - end of sample - >