Just as an extra note, there used to be a problem with IE reading this meta tag and some older broswers may not read it correctly.
I can't find the article but it was on MS website somewhere.
When IE encounters a page it has actually cached some of the page before that tag is processed. The solution that MS gave was to include 2 head sections in your page, one at the top and one at the bottom. This means that when a browser reads the page, if the first tag is not correctly read then the second one is and the part already cached is then removed.
The problem with meta tags is not that they are supported
improperly in IE, but that there is not standard of how
they should be interpreted (I hope I spelled that correctly)
Good luck, BobbaFet
Everyone has a right to my opinion.
E-mail me at caswegkamp@hotmail.com
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