
Probably then, this is just the ordinary download dialog we're all familiar with, and has nothing to do withĮmbed tags that have dominated this discussion. So, to begin at the beginning, you're clicking aĭownload dialog. Okay, so I can use a hex editor to see the code? If so, I can do that when I get back to work and see what the first few bytes of the file are to help identify it. The first three bytes of the tif file should be 'tif' not 'jpg'. Without changing the digital signature of the image file.

commonly jpg files are renamed with a different extension Raise a question, it's highly recommended you head on over to Īpart from inspecting the element that you are hosting the image in (embed/object) for a missing type attribute, use an image editing tool to inspect the 'tif' files' digital signature (eg. If you are a consumer looking for answers or to Topics covered are: Installation, Deployment, Configuration, Security, Group Policy, Management questions. Questions regarding Internet Explorer 8, 9 and 10 and Internet Explorer 11 for the IT Pro Audience. consult with your system administrators and/or developer programmers. "however our GP restricts some of the settings that I can change." They will see two (if the file is not already cached). I expect that on IE without a type attribute with the correct mime-type, Your developers should only see one request made for the tiff resource. Your description indicates that it may be a coding issue with embed or object tags (missing type attribute). I have this same problem on several computers and while you can just click the link again or click 'Retry' on the Downloads Seems to be about 70% works and 30% doesn't. "Its just confusing that it sometimes works and sometimes doesn't work. IĪm at a loss and looking for any insight. If I use Google Chrome it works fine but we rely on IE for a lot of inhouse applications so other browsers are not an option.

This worked fine on IE8 and IE9 (never had IE10) but we recently upgraded to IE11 and now it is exhibiting this issue. The only odd thing is that it works some of the time. Iīelieve that there is something in IE that is trying to download *.tiff files instead of *.tif so it can not find the file and gives me the error. If I close IE and reopen it and then view downloads, it now says *.TIF (all caps) has been moved or deleted. Now the odd thing is that the file I am trying to open is a *.tif but IE will say that *.tiff (yes, extra 'f') has been moved or deleted. All other file types (pdf, docx, etc) download fine. I can try to download the same file 10 times in a row and it may failĤ/10 times and open the other 6 times. When I click the link to download one of these files it opens sometimes and fails other times. I have a problem with IE11 when downloading *.tif files from an intranet server.
