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This new version is compatible with mobile devices like smartphones and tablets. Everything has been edited and updated. New information has been added. The documentation has been moved from PDF to a series of online pages. And of course, the whole website is still hosted on one of my public servers running Slackware - what else?
The new one just has slowly rotating curved lines in the middle of the browser window. The old one renders content nicely. Is the CSS ok on the new page?
I'm not a mled user, but your new website hardly works with my heavily customized firefox profile, your old one did perfectly... :shrug:
It works perfectly on a standard Firefox browser - and any standard web browser for the matter. If your heavily customized Firefox profile can't view it, you can still use Links to navigate the content.
The new one just has slowly rotating curved lines in the middle of the browser window.
I'm not sure if you're being sarcastic or not. My experience on the site was the same as yours until I temporarily turned on javascript for the site, then the site worked for me.
I would show both links to those that do make the rules there, since the other search engines will probably follow Google soon and start penalizing such blocked sites.
Depending on the country in which the site is based, failing to provide a working site may be in violation of accessibility laws.
Save both work and increase your market by n percent by using HTML and CSS instead of JS.
Edit: Here are two positive examples of using CSS without requiring JS:
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