Notes about plugins I have users that want to visit my pages with tclets, but they do not have the plugin. What can I do? Add a pluginspage=http://www.sunlabs.com/tcl/plugin/ name=value pair to the embed statement. This will cause Navigator to find the plugin for your user and suggest they install it. The user is then prompted to download and install the plugin, and then she has to restart the browser and revisit your page. Very inconvenient and only slightly better than giving your users the broken image icon. Netscape says they are working on a more automatic solution. 14. Your demos work just fine, but when I visit my own pages with tclets in them, at http://www.myserver.com/~mypages/mypage.html, I still get the broken image icon. Why doesn't it work for me? This is likely because your web server -- the program that sends the pages to your browser when you click on a URL -- is not sending the right mime-type when it sends the '.tcl' file. You can work around this by adding a type=application/x-tcl name=value pair to the embed statement, which will cause Navigator to infer that it should use the Tcl plugin anyways. A better solution is to ask your system administrator to configure the web server to send the mime type application/x-tcl when it sends files with a '.tcl' extension. Nearly all web servers in the world nowadays are already configured to do this, the only ones we are aware of that do not are some older versions of Apache.