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question #21054118
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:59
thanks, saw that. Neat app imo
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:58
good luck
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:58
wait the seven days, someone might beat me fair and square :) update the question if things change
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:57
exciting as this was
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:56
anyway
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:56
maybe get into Selenium automated testing
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:56
it would be such a marginal win anyway... but if you're after every edge, good luck profiling these things
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:56
yes; keep in mind my IMO though
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:54
not consistently
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:54
just the elements themselves; I could add children/event listeners etc
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:53
I reckon this is plenty, not sure how much of this would work out though :)
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:52
oh, you'd actually be able to manipulate elements; the only one I had major issues with in test were html and body, but their descendants were OK
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:50
...or will not resume if it's killed
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:50
flow will resume after it "un-hangs"
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:50
pretty much
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:49
exactly
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:48
if that makes sense
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:48
Neat, good luck! Well you basically want maximum expiry time of 1yr, but be able to change the URL of the script src in case there is a bugfix/new feature added
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:47
if it isn't, kick your infrastructure team but read up on cachebusting :)
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:47
Chrome/Firebug should tell you if resource is loaded from cache or not
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:46
beautiful; if you sit through a session as the client with F12 network profiler open
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:46
my thought exactly
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:45
anyway, to the previous point
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:45
but if you pass it get parameters, that's a no-go
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:45
if the script src could remain the same, a correct caching setting would be sufficient
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:44
there will be a momentary lag though opening the websocket(?)
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:44
and be pretty snazzy (speed-wise)
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:44
it should persist in client cache
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:43
and if you add your script at the end
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:43
...
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:43
until the bloated script is finished
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:43
it would be pretty useless. since it wouldn't be able to send/receive cursor pos etc.
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:43
and then followed by some bloated client js
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:42
IMO even if the co-browsing code were loaded first thing
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:41
yes of course
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:40
ah
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:40
...meaning that co-browsing code doesn't need to be loaded until I click the button? :)
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:40
and then click "request assistance"
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:39
browse for half a minute
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:39
so I could load your client's "normal" page
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:38
rather than everyday workflow?
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:38
do I understand correctly that co-browsing is more of a focus group/research/UX debug kind of mode
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:36
even if there was a way to defer all client scripts after it until DOM is ready to be manipulated
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:34
if your code is in head
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:34
I'm just trying to think
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:33
i.e. in relation to other script tags on the page
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:33
where do your clients add your script tag to right now?
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:32
then the order isn't guaranteed at all - that's what "async" is for :/
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:32
that has been queued for loading before your code
o.v.
Jan 14, 2014 06:31
so if there is a slow
external async
script