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1 | initial version | posted 2015-01-06 23:31:46 +0200 |
To replicate:
1) browse on a mobile network connection (e.g. registering at 2G). 2) open 2 or more tabs to remote URIs. 3) in the active tab, enter a new web address and switch to another tab as it loads.
While the former tab loads, in the tab GUI the tab shifts position and empties. It is as if the loading page gets put into the wrong place or overwrites the wrong memory.
Before a tab switch is done during loading.
After a tab switch is done:
tba
2 | No.2 Revision |
To replicate:
1) browse on a mobile network connection (e.g. registering at 2G). 2) open 2 or more tabs to remote URIs. 3) in the active tab, enter a new web address and switch to another tab as it loads.
While the former tab loads, in the tab GUI the tab shifts position and empties. It is as if the loading page gets put into the wrong place or overwrites the wrong memory.
Before a tab switch is done during loading.
After a tab switch is done:
tba
I do not know why the images are 90° off in rotation.
3 | No.3 Revision |
To replicate:
1) browse on a mobile network connection (e.g. registering at 2G). 2) open 2 or more tabs to remote URIs. 3) in the active tab, enter a new web address and switch to another tab as it loads.
While the former tab loads, in the tab GUI the tab shifts position and empties. It is as if the loading page gets put into the wrong place or overwrites the wrong memory.
Before a tab switch is done during loading.
After a tab switch is done:
The problem seems to occur when the two tabs are still loading and a third is opened or entered to choose a third web location: switchong between tje tabs will then lose the third location's window/tab/address. This happens in low-bandwidth conditions a lot bur is a tricky bug to define, if it is just the one.
I do not know why the images are 90° off in rotation.
4 | No.4 Revision |
To replicate:
1) browse on a mobile network connection (e.g. registering at 2G).
2G).
2) open 2 or more tabs to remote URIs.
URIs.
3) in the active tab, enter a new web address and switch to another tab as it loads.
While the former tab loads, in the tab GUI the tab shifts position and empties. It is as if the loading page gets put into the wrong place or overwrites the wrong memory.
Before a tab switch is done during loading.
After a tab switch is done:
The problem seems to occur when the two tabs are still loading and a third is opened or entered entered, to choose a third web location: switchong switching between tje the tabs will then lose the third location's window/tab/address. This happens in low-bandwidth conditions a lot bur is a tricky bug to define, if it is just the one.
I do not know why the images are 90° off in rotation.rotation. I'll try to fix that.
5 | No.5 Revision |
To replicate:
1) browse on a mobile network connection (e.g. registering at 2G).
2) open 2 or more tabs to remote URIs.
3) in the active tab, enter a new web address and switch to another tab as it loads.
While the former tab loads, in the tab GUI the tab shifts position and empties. It is as if the loading page gets put into the wrong place or overwrites the wrong memory.
Before a tab switch is done during loading.
After a tab switch is done:
The problem seems to occur when the two tabs are still loading and a third is opened or entered, to choose a third web location: switching between the tabs will then lose the third location's window/tab/address. This happens in low-bandwidth conditions a lot bur is a tricky bug to define, if it is just the one.
I do not know why the images are 90° off in rotation. I'll try to fix that.
6 | No.6 Revision |
To replicate:
1) browse on a mobile network connection (e.g. registering at 2G).
2) open 2 or more tabs to remote URIs.
3) in the active tab, enter a new web address and switch to another tab as it loads.
While the former tab loads, in the tab GUI the tab shifts position and empties. It is as if the loading page gets put into the wrong place or overwrites the wrong memory.
Before a tab switch is done during loading.
After a tab switch is done:
The problem seems to occur when the two tabs are still loading and a third is opened or entered, to choose a third web location: switching between the tabs will then lose the third location's window/tab/address. This happens in low-bandwidth conditions a lot bur is a tricky bug to define, if it is just the one.
I do not know why the images are 90° off in rotation. I'll try to fix that.
7 | No.7 Revision |
To replicate:
1) browse on a mobile network connection (e.g. registering at 2G).
2) open 2 or more tabs to remote URIs.
3) in the active tab, enter a new web address and switch to another tab as it loads.
While the former tab loads, in the tab GUI the tab shifts position and empties. It is as if the loading page gets put into the wrong place or overwrites the wrong memory.
Before a tab switch is done during loading.
After a tab switch is done:
The problem seems to occur when the two tabs are still loading and a third is opened or entered, to choose a third web location: switching between the tabs will then lose the third location's window/tab/address. This happens in low-bandwidth conditions a lot bur is a tricky bug to define, if it is just the one.define.
The screenshots show the second tab address replaced by the first, but rather than the second also switching to tje first, the second appears to disappear, replaced by an empty address line.
8 | No.8 Revision |
To replicate:
1) browse on a mobile network connection (e.g. registering at 2G).
2) open 2 or more tabs to remote URIs.
3) in the active tab, enter a new web address and switch to another tab as it loads.
While the former tab loads, in the tab GUI the tab shifts position and empties. It is as if the loading page gets put into the wrong place or overwrites the wrong memory.
Before a tab switch is done during loading.
After a tab switch is done:
The problem seems to occur when the two tabs are still loading and a third is opened or entered, to choose a third web location: switching between the tabs will then lose the third location's window/tab/address. This happens in low-bandwidth conditions a lot bur is a tricky bug to define.
The screenshots show the second tab address replaced by the first, but rather than the second also switching to tje the first, the second appears to disappear, replaced by an empty address line.
9 | No.9 Revision |
To replicate:
1) browse on a mobile network connection (e.g. registering at 2G).
2) open 2 or more tabs to remote URIs.
3) in the active tab, enter a new web address and switch to another tab as it loads.
While the former tab loads, in the tab GUI the tab shifts position and empties. It is as if the loading page gets put into the wrong place or overwrites the wrong memory.
Before a tab switch is done during loading.
loading:
After a tab switch is done:
The problem seems to occur when the two tabs are still loading and a third is opened or entered, to choose a third web location: switching between the tabs will then lose the third location's window/tab/address. This happens in low-bandwidth conditions a lot bur is a tricky bug to define.
The screenshots show the second tab address replaced by the first, but rather than the second also switching to the first, the second appears to disappear, replaced by an empty address line.
10 | No.10 Revision |
To replicate:
1) browse on a mobile network connection (e.g. registering at 2G).
2) open 2 or more tabs to remote URIs.
3) in the active tab, enter a new web address and switch to another tab as it loads.
While the former tab loads, in the tab GUI the tab shifts position and empties. It is as if the loading page gets put into the wrong place or overwrites the wrong memory.
Before a tab switch is done during loading:
After a tab switch is done:
The problem seems to occur when the two tabs are still loading and a third is opened or entered, to choose a third web location: switching between the tabs will then lose the third location's window/tab/address. This happens in low-bandwidth conditions a lot bur but is a tricky bug to define.
The screenshots show the second tab address replaced by the first, but rather than the second also switching to the first, the second appears to disappear, replaced by an empty address line.
To replicate:
1) browse on a mobile network connection (e.g. registering at 2G).
2) open 2 or more tabs to remote URIs.
3) in the active tab, enter a new web address and switch to another tab as it loads.
While the former tab loads, in the tab GUI the tab shifts position and empties. It is as if the loading page gets put into the wrong place or overwrites the wrong memory.
Before a tab switch is done during loading:
After a tab switch is done:
The problem seems to occur when the two tabs are still loading and a third is opened or entered, to choose a third web location: switching between the tabs will then lose the third location's window/tab/address. This happens in low-bandwidth conditions a lot but is a tricky bug to define.
The screenshots show the second tab address replaced by the first, but rather than the second also switching to the first, the second appears to disappear, replaced by an empty address line.