Tom Ashcraft writes:
All three links on the page dysfunctional. Dead. No way to actually communicate that I do not wish to receive such communications. Not that I should have to because, as I've previously written, I've already done it before.
Tom
Here's the code from the page in case someone who understands such things better than I is willing and able to provide some perspective or objective analysis:
Unfortunately the actual buttons aren't in there. They're probably coming from one of the many scripts the page loads, e.g. <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/angular.js/1.6.5/angular.min.js"></ script><script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/angular.js/1.6.5/angular-route.min. js"></script><script type="text/javascript" src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/angular.js/1.6.5/angular-cookies.mi n.js"></script><script src="scripts/libs/ui-bootstrap-tpls-2.5.0.min.js"></script><script src="scripts/libs/angular-base64.min.js"></script><script src="scripts/app.js"></script><script src="scripts/services/addPreferenceService.js"></script><script src="scripts/services/filterHeaderService.js"></script><script src="scripts/controllers/mainController.js"></script><script src="scripts/controllers/managePreferenceController.js"></script> All those scripts/* URLs are relative to whatever page you were on, which isn't shown in the screenshot. Sometimes you can tell something with the DOM inspector. Right-click on one of the non-functioning buttons and choose "Inspect" or "Inspect element" (both Firefox and Chrome have an inspector, with different strengths). Then you can poke around in the inspector window to see if it's a link with an href, if it has an onClick function, etc. This isn't guaranteed to tell you what's going on, but at least there's a chance. I'd been idly considering the idea of switching to Comcast despite terrible past experiences, because CenturyLink DSL has been so slow and unreliable lately. You're reminding me why I shouldn't. Anyone have experience with fixed wireless providers, like LANet or NMSurf? I have a good sightlight to Pajarito Mountain, but I hear weather can be a big problem with fixed wireless, and I'm guessing installation costs would make it an expensive experiment. ...Akkana