(07-21-2013 08:07 AM)Liriel Garnet Wrote: [ -> ]I'm assuming you're talking about the suggestion to 'mass send' the request to display pedi links for the cats when you say this.
Yes.
(07-21-2013 08:07 AM)Liriel Garnet Wrote: [ -> ]I am curious though, if you know for sure that it actually uses some sort of 'broadcast' to the cat in-world when you check the box now.
I am not privy to the details. But I think the idea was covered elsewhere (perhaps in a Support conversation I had .. I don't recall), and the reason given was that the idea to "set all cats" was considered, and dropped, out of fear (probably rightly) that such a large number of requests coming into Second Life from a single source (a KittyCatS! server) would run afoul of some throttle on the Linden Labs network.
What I can say for sure is the processing for setting the option, per cat, involves a request from your web browser, to the KittyCatS! web server. That means the request, somehow, gets from the web server, to the cat.
As to the sorting question: I presume it's all about the Pedigree page. Boxes on the Cattery page are already time-ordered.
Of course, sorting is a bit problematic for the KittyCatS! web pages. On some web browsers, I note the page downloads sorted "in the default order" (whatever that is), then, immediately upon the page fully loading into the browser, re-sorts into name sequence; making it impossible to get back to that "Default" order.
In addition, the KittyCatS! Web pages generally do NOT "sort" on your end. Instead, they include complete copies of pre-sorted information, for each sort sequence. And, yes, that means that, for every cat you see on the screen, there's a few more copies of that information downloaded, and hidden, (slowing down the page and wasting bandwidth) in case you should happen to use another sort option.
If you're simply interested in knowing how to compare two cats, and judge (with a fair amount of certainty) which came first, I can explain it. The information you need is on your screen, you just need to know what it means and how to interpret it.