Food & Drink2 mins ago
Ab Seizing Up ..
22 Answers
AB seizes up within a minute or so of my visiting and has done so for some time...any chance of this being rectified...but not by me?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Which browser are you using? Using Internet Explorer (for any website) is little short of madness. Edge might be slightly better but Firefox, Chrome, Vivaldi, Avant or, indeed, anything not from ruddy Microsoft are all far, far better. (That assumes that you're using a PC anyway, rather than, say, an Android tablet or an iPad).
I use Firefox (with that-which-shall-not-be-named-here installed) without any problems.
I use Firefox (with that-which-shall-not-be-named-here installed) without any problems.
HereIam:
There are loads of hints in this thread (or, far easier, simply skip to Sci-Fi's post at the end of it!):
http:// www.the answerb ank.co. uk/Tech nology/ Interne t/Quest ion1511 949.htm l
There are loads of hints in this thread (or, far easier, simply skip to Sci-Fi's post at the end of it!):
http://
^^^ Grasscarp:
It's almost certainly because the content for each page here is drawn from a ridiculously large number of different servers (with most of them, understandably, delivering up ads).
Let's hope that the new version of AB reduces the number of different sources required to fully load an AB page or possibly (even better) embeds the ads into a page before it's sent out for reading (in the way that Facebook does with ads). That way we'll get faster loading pages and The Editor can be sure that we'll actually see the ads (because ad blockers can only block content served up by third party servers, not from the actual site which is being viewed).
It's almost certainly because the content for each page here is drawn from a ridiculously large number of different servers (with most of them, understandably, delivering up ads).
Let's hope that the new version of AB reduces the number of different sources required to fully load an AB page or possibly (even better) embeds the ads into a page before it's sent out for reading (in the way that Facebook does with ads). That way we'll get faster loading pages and The Editor can be sure that we'll actually see the ads (because ad blockers can only block content served up by third party servers, not from the actual site which is being viewed).