Copyright

The Great Lord lays down his rules, and the Chosen either obey or hope that the Big Cheese of the Dark doesn't catch them disobeying. It's the same way here with copyright. All material derived or excerpted from the Wheel of Time is under international copyright laws and agreements by Tor and Robert Jordan. The art in the Art Gallery is copyright to their respective owners. "Far Kiserai Souvran" roughly translates from the Old Tongue into English as "The Minds of Glory," and is a self-created Old Tongue phrase following the implied guidelines Robert Jordan has used with his language since his second book. If any copyright infringements exist within this website, they are neither meant nor implied--please contact me at dragonthief@wotmasters.com with any details.

Unless stated otherwise, all other material is copyrighted by wotmasters, 1998-2003. Which means, in essence, not to blatantly rip off either my site design or content. If you see a script you like, take it and modify it. If you like a particular way I did a layout, take that and modify it. That's fine. That's learning by example. DO NOT take so much from my design that your design is obviously a replica, however. If I see that on the web, and have reason to believe this has happened, well, better hope the Dark One gets you first. Don't take ANY of my content. I worked for it all, or had friends who helped me voluntarily (perhaps semi-voluntarily, but that's not the point).

Viewing Optimization

This site is designed to be viewed with a resolution of 800x600 or more, and is best viewed with the resolution of 1024x768. 16bit or 32bit color is also preferred. While lesser color amounts or smaller resolutions might work, they have not been tested and are now considered obsolete.

Web Browsers and W3C Standards

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is the organization that sets forth the standards for web programming--in other words, they are the ones who tell the browsers companies (Netscape, Internet Explorer, Mozilla, Opera, AOL, etc) what they should do with each particular bit of web programming. Or, more correctly, they do in theory. Sometimes companies get the crack-brained idea that they know more about how to do stuff that the governing body who created the stuff. The result of which leads to products such as Netscape Navigator 4.X series--the worst browser for online standards to date.

Anyways, on to what this means to you. I've developed this site with a certain layout and look in mind. Aside from being merely annoying and irrating in that I may or may not be able to control how this site looks, it can cause some serious problems if your web browser does not adhere to web standards very well. This may lead to text showing up unreadable, the layout looking like something a hyper first grader would create, or that ugly mess after two fully loaded trains derail each other. But see, since I've checked and validated my code against the W3C's standards, I know it's not my fault. My coding is completely, 100% valid. So that leaves the culprit as your browser. If this turns out to be the case, I'd recomend one of these browsers(with the best one currently being Mozilla for supporting web standards):
Internet Explorer 6.0 +
Mozilla 1.1 +
Netscape 7.0 +
Opera 7.0 +