My internet provider recently switched me over from USB cable to
ethernet cable to connect my computer with my modem.

What started happening since then is that every time I go to a new web
site, I get a Windows Internet Explorer Box that comes up saying:

"Stop running this script? A script on this page is causing Internet
Explorer to run slowly. If it continues to run, your computer may
become unresponsive. Yes, No."

...and then I always choose "yes" and then things proceed normally.

Question: is there anything I can do to eliminate the continual coming-
up of this dialogue box?

I thank you in advance for your attention to this question.

RE: How do I get rid of the "Stop running this script?" box by ReySantos

ReySantos
Sat Apr 26 08:10:00 PDT 2008

How to set time-out period for script
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/175500
--
Rey


"shempmcgurk@netscape.net" wrote:

> My internet provider recently switched me over from USB cable to
> ethernet cable to connect my computer with my modem.
>
> What started happening since then is that every time I go to a new web
> site, I get a Windows Internet Explorer Box that comes up saying:
>
> "Stop running this script? A script on this page is causing Internet
> Explorer to run slowly. If it continues to run, your computer may
> become unresponsive. Yes, No."
>
> ....and then I always choose "yes" and then things proceed normally.
>
> Question: is there anything I can do to eliminate the continual coming-
> up of this dialogue box?
>
> I thank you in advance for your attention to this question.
>

Re: How do I get rid of the "Stop running this script?" box by Gerry

Gerry
Sat Apr 26 11:13:37 PDT 2008

Tools, Internet Options, Advanced, Browsing and check boxes before
Disable Script Debugging (Internet Explorer and before Disable Script
Debugging (Other).


--



Hope this helps.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


shempmcgurk@netscape.net wrote:
> My internet provider recently switched me over from USB cable to
> ethernet cable to connect my computer with my modem.
>
> What started happening since then is that every time I go to a new web
> site, I get a Windows Internet Explorer Box that comes up saying:
>
> "Stop running this script? A script on this page is causing Internet
> Explorer to run slowly. If it continues to run, your computer may
> become unresponsive. Yes, No."
>
> ...and then I always choose "yes" and then things proceed normally.
>
> Question: is there anything I can do to eliminate the continual
> coming- up of this dialogue box?
>
> I thank you in advance for your attention to this question.



Re: How do I get rid of the "Stop running this script?" box by pip22

pip22
Sat Apr 26 21:55:04 PDT 2008


Microsoft's official method for dealing with this problem is here: 'Ho
to set time-out period for script
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/175500

A much quicker way is to use Firefox as apparently it doesn't have tha
problem -- plus it's a safer web-browser than IE, mainly on account o
it not using any potentially unsafe ActiveX components

Use IE only where you have no choice, such as the Microsoft Updat
service (needs an ActiveX-aware browser)



Re: How do I get rid of the "Stop running this script?" box by Karl

Karl
Tue Jun 03 15:43:02 PDT 2008

Pip22,

Sorry to inform you - Firefox DOES have an "Unresponsive script" dialog - i
found this post because I'm troubleshooting a problem where automated testing
in Firefox keeps throwing this dialog. Furthermore, increasing the timeout
doesnt help as it just waits longer to show the dialog. I think its something
to do with my testing environment (Selenium 0.83 if anyone wants to know).

Anyway, I havent found any way to turn this off entirely in IE or Firefox -
you would have expected them BOTH to have a config setting to "always stop"
or "always continue" scripts after they reach the max runtime - its
ridiculous how the user needs to click a button to continue - why not just
show it somewhere else and NOT interrupt browsing (e.g. privacy warnings,
page errors dialog, or console in FF)!? .... But oh well, dreams are free


"pip22" wrote:

>
> Microsoft's official method for dealing with this problem is here: 'How
> to set time-out period for script'
> (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/175500)
>
> A much quicker way is to use Firefox as apparently it doesn't have that
> problem -- plus it's a safer web-browser than IE, mainly on account of
> it not using any potentially unsafe ActiveX components.
>
> Use IE only where you have no choice, such as the Microsoft Update
> service (needs an ActiveX-aware browser).
>
>
>