Ingredients
- 1/2 cup finely chopped celery
- 1/2 cup finely chopped green pepper
- 1/2 cup finely chopped onion
- 2 tablespoons butter or margarine
- 8 slices white bread, crusts trimmed, cut in half diagonally
- 1 can HORMEL® Corned Beef (12 oz), coarsely chopped
- 1 cup shredded cheddar cheese
- 1 1/2 cups milk
- 3 eggs, beaten
Corned Beef Brunch Strata
Servings: 6
Directions
Cook celery, green pepper and onion in butter until tender. Arrange half of the bread slices in bottom of 2-quart baking dish; top with half of the corned beef. Spoon vegetable mixture over corned beef. Cover with remaining corned beef; top with remaining bread. Combine milk and eggs; mix well. Carefully pour mixture over bread. Bake in 350°F oven 40 minutes or until golden brown.
Originally posted by dan182I also use FF mainly but [as I have said before] some sites I go to just do not work with anything other than IE.
Yes they do....
To be honest I mainly use FF but because most sites are designed for IE I find 60% of the time I have to switch to IE (using the ie add on for FF).
Don't get me wrong, I am not saying IE is better because it clearly is not.
Bowmann's answer is not to go to the sites, which doesn't solve anything.
Originally posted by Dr StrangeloveFrom: www.explorerdestroyer.com/open_letter.php
I also use FF mainly but [as I have said before] some sites I go to just do not work with anything other than IE.
'Remember those splash pages on websites that say "You must be using Internet Explorer to view this page." What if it was the opposite? What if websites said: "You cannot view this page with Internet Explorer. Please download Firefox to continue."
'It's a tough strategy. On the one hand, we knew it would convert way more people than classy-but-tiny "get firefox" buttons. But would bloggers and site administrators really put a splash page between 90% of their readers and their own content?
'We've personally spent countless hours struggling to make our standards-compliant websites display correctly on standards-bashing Internet Explorer. We've spent days fixing computers of our family members that have been hobbled by spyware that Internet Explorer allowed in. These annoyances alone more than justify an aggressive campaign to switch people to Firefox. But what really matters is putting the internet back in the hands of the public and ensuring that the technology that will remake so much of our world in the next 30 years is a public resource not a corporate one.'
Originally posted by BowmannI followed the link at the bottom (thank god links weren't named rings). I can see the point that is being conveyed but I still don't think it will work. It's worth doing though. If 100 people switch it will have been worth it.
Yes, that page is mainly for fun but following the link at the bottom will take you to the point you're missing.
Originally posted by BowmannAre you one of the "four friends" who started that site.
From: www.explorerdestroyer.com/open_letter.php
'Remember those splash pages on websites that say "You must be using Internet Explorer to view this page." What if it was the opposite? What if websites said: "You cannot view this page with Internet Explorer. Please download Firefox to continue."
'It's a tough strategy. On the one hand, we knew it woul ...[text shortened]... o much of our world in the next 30 years is a public resource not a corporate one.'
If so, how much have you made so far.
Also from the site.
www.explorerdestroyer.com/open_letter.php
The second site we launch is called killbillsbrowser.com. It's a parody site with jokes about Internet Explorer, but it's also meant as a serious way to convince people to switch. And when people switch on our sites, we'll make referrer money, which is nice too.
$1 for each referal - not bad.