Lynx

I’ve just downloaded Lynx, the text-only browser. I did it because I was curious. I never thought it would open in a command prompt! I’m not really sure what I expected; possible a normal browser-type window, with a text-box in it.

My site is ok, except for the sidebar – I’d rather not have the list of links if the reader is going to be using Lynx. I wonder how can I can remove it.

Tell the world about this!

Automagically-generated possibly-related posts:


3 responses to "Lynx"

  • I remember using lynx back when the Christians’ invisible friend saw it was good. I’m surprised it’s still being maintained, but it’s a very good browser when all you want is information without fluff.

    1 said Damien Ryan (17th October 2006 at 12.25 pm GMT) Reply


  • And there’s not a pop-up to be seen and you can tell those cookies just where to go. It’s great!

    2 said pandammonium (18th October 2006 at 9.42 am GMT) Reply


  • Back in 1993, Lynx was the only way I could access the nascent WWW as my only Internet connection was via dialup dumb terminal. Didn’t seem a limitation at the time, though, as everything was text-only and suitable for dumb terminals (elm and pine, tin and nn, archie, ftp, gopher)

    Then along came Mosaic. I remember the first website I saw in Mosaic that had images. It was a guide from students at MIT on how to pick locks and it included diagrams! Diagrams on the Internet! It was a watershed moment for me.

    That said, Lynx was for a long time (and probably still is, really) the best way to check the true accessibility of the content on your website.

    3 said James Tauber (18th October 2006 at 12.38 pm GMT) Reply


Leave a Reply

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Comments RSS Subscribe to the Comments RSS.
Trackback Leave a trackback from your site.
Trackback URL: http://pandammonium.org/2006/10/16/lynx/trackback/