@ kirby: Did you allow cookies (at least, per-session)? Any site that wants something as specific as a ZIP code will need a cookie to maintain that ZIP (or other data) for the session, as you navigate around. This was a strong early motivation to use cookies, the Internet being "stateless" (no pun intended), before they were used for tracking our browsing around the entire Web.
With cookies enabled, the site works for me in Firefox 12.0; 3.6.28, and 2.0.0.20.
Temp-allowed charter.com, but didn't need to allow estara. Additional cookies were set after entering ZIP.
I took a shot and entered ZIP 29301. Got a dropdown window, with Spartanburg (South Carolina) as the only entry. Clicked it.
Got another dropdown, "DIGITAL' and "BASIC". Chose "Basic".
It loaded. Clicking the arrows moved the time frame etc.
Note that there is an HTTPS at some point. If you allowed only www dot charter.com, you may have to allow https/charter.com.
So it's easier just to allow the entire charter.com domain, if you trust them.
On Fx 2.0, I had to click a placeholder (or in Blocked Objects sub-menu) for an <IFRAME>. Nothing on the later browsers.
@ Thrawn: With those diagnostic steps, are you angling for a slot on the
Support Team?
Long hours, no pay, occasional insults (you know to what I refer), and once in a great while, a "thank you" from a satisfied user.
And yes, that site is for telly listings in the US. Not surprised that it won't accept your request. I had the same trouble with one BBC or The Register site (don't remember which; probably BBC). Had to get Giorgio or Guardian to use their UK proxies, which I don't have.
GµårÐïåñ wrote:@Tom, you think you can draw up a standard template for reporting problems so we get the full picture without having to go back an forth like pulling teeth?
Already did, almost three years ago, soon after this forum opened.
Forum Rules #11 -- which, of course, you strongly supported in the pre-approval team discussion.
So, I don't think that re-posting them anywhere else will get any more users to read them.
