Open Biblical Places (it happened to open to "Tarshish (port city)" -- not sure whether that matters)
Click on the Google "G" in the upper right corner.
Result:
Logos didn't crash, though. Log file attached.
5340.IExploreException.zip
I object, Rosie stole my bug report [:P]
DISCLAIMER: Before I am flamed for this post, it is an attempt at humor
BTW, SR2 works fine on this point.
I object, Rosie stole my bug report DISCLAIMER: Before I am flamed for this post, it is an attempt at humor
I object, Rosie stole my bug report
Hee, hee.
See this thread for more info on other weird behavior that sometimes happens when clicking (or not being able to click) on that "G" icon, and maybe Terry's experience of nothing happening at all is related:
http://community.logos.com/forums/t/9239.aspx
maybe Terry's experience of nothing happening at all is related:
I am betting related, what IE are you using, 7 or 8? I am running 8, on win7
I'm running IE8 on Vista Ultimate 64-bit SP2
I am running under Parallels so my internet link takes me to safari. I do not have any problems opening Google Maps. Must be an IE issue.
OT a little but upgrade to Windows 7 64 bit! It is WAY BETTER and faster than Windows Vista. Do a little Googling around, you will see the reviews are very positive, especially compared to Vista.
IMHO it's an excellent investment for a computer that you require speed and performance, and better security, to do bible/theology work!
(I do not work for Microsoft or have any affiliation with them [8-|])
OT a little but upgrade to Windows 7 64 bit! It is WAY BETTER and faster than Windows Vista. Do a little Googling around, you will see the reviews are very positive, especially compared to Vista. IMHO it's an excellent investment for a computer that you require speed and performance, and better security, to do bible/theology work! (I do not work for Microsoft or have any affiliation with them )
(I do not work for Microsoft or have any affiliation with them )
I used to work for Microsoft so I have lots of affilliation with them and I can certainly understand. But I just bought this new computer a few months before Win 7 shipped, with Vista on it, and it's pretty darned fast, and I've never had all the Vista problems that other people had. And I do tech support for bunches of people so it pays for me to keep a Vista machine. If/when I upgrade to Win 7, it will be on an entirely new machine and I'll keep this one as my secondard one. I still have my XP machine for now, but I'll retire that one eventually too. I never upgrade OS's on the same machine. It spells disaster. Especially coming from Microsoft... [;)]
If/when I upgrade to Win 7, it will be on an entirely new machine and I'll keep this one as my secondard one. ... I never upgrade OS's on the same machine.
After 30+ years computer hobbiest & 20+ years as an IS manager prior to life (as a pastor [;)]), same here.
Open Biblical Places (it happened to open to "Tarshish (port city)" -- not sure whether that matters) Click on the Google "G" in the upper right corner. Result:
On my machine nothing happens until I click somewhere on the map. Then the "G" becomes visible.
But when I click on the big "G" I get this result (using FireFox 3,5,7):
We could not understand the location 37.6449807735425, --5.26894274192968
Looks like a parsing error crept in here somewhere.
I used to work for Microsoft so I have lots of affilliation
This explains sooooo many things! [A]
But I just bought this new computer a few months before Win 7 shipped, with Vista on it, and it's pretty darned fast, and I've never had all the Vista problems that other people had.
You mean it took that long for CPU's to make Vista look good[:)]
If/when I upgrade to Win 7, it will be on an entirely new machine and I'll keep this one as my secondard one. I still have my XP machine for now, but I'll retire that one eventually too. I never upgrade OS's on the same machine. It spells disaster.
I have Win XP SP3 and Vista SP2 and Windows 7 64-bit RC on my 3 year old laptop! Vista came as a cheap upgrade because I got the laptop with XP just before Vista shipped (and obviously decided on a clean install), and I also needed to sympathise with those folk who actually bought it as a native OS. Win 7 RC cost nothing and I have until March to think about a Win 7 replacement laptop!
I have Win XP SP3 and Vista SP2 and Windows 7 64-bit RC on my 3 year old laptop!
I don't do dual boots either -- takes up too much hard disk space. Hard disk sizes aren't able to keep up with my usage. I install so much software and produce so many large data files (mostly photos, some video) that I don't want the OS taking up more than the bare minimum.