Comment from Chet
I once had a teacher mention to me in art school that some of the most skilled craftsmen around, are aware of and excel at working inside the limitations of there choosen medium. Just a thought.
View ArticleComment from Scott
> Nice to have but I'm not going to lose any sleep over it You've never stayed up late into the night to make sure something was working properly in IE the day before its deadline? I thought...
View ArticleComment from Hakan Bilgin
Well said...it has been a long time since I was inpired by others but I like what your writings...thanx. PS: I tried to make comments with IE6/Windows but it didn't work so good. Perhaps you are aware...
View ArticleComment from Ed
Do remember that IE is an integrated part of the operating system ~ shdocvw.dll ~ and not a standalone rendering component. This makes it MUCH harder to amend as an awful lot of legacy applications...
View ArticleComment from Robert
It's a sad state of affairs. The web could be so much more if MS made IE standards compliant as it would allow developers to produce websites much more quickly and without hacks in order to make them...
View ArticleComment from Peter
Well, you're obviously right that MS doesn't *have* to make IE fully-CSS complaint, but what bothers me is it seems this is well within their grasp - it doesn't seem to be a problem with lack of skill...
View ArticleComment from Armin Besirovic
I'd go along with Ed on the point of IE, though I think it halts evolution. People often tend to "argue" but none "debate" and that's where I think the problem is! The sad truth is that people best...
View ArticleComment from Johan
Arguing but what is the use? IE WIN is hopping along, and we have to ride along. It is a company, and decides itself. Though the law is not really helpful, especially for the little man!
View ArticleComment from Ed
If I was head of IE, I wouldn't fix it. Biggest market share, most of the web is accessible through it, it's the most forgiving browser, it's quick, it's reliable, it can be integrated seamlessly into...
View ArticleComment from Jonathan Snook
joel: well, certainly any product has a level of 'cost' to produce anything within the environment of that product. However, there's really no accurate way to create a measurable cost that would be...
View ArticleComment from joel
A few concepts have been brought up here. #1: IE is not "free" when it is an embedded part of the system. This is on the user side. One should also consider the cost from a developer side to determine...
View ArticleComment from Aaron Martone
Does Microsoft owe us a standards compliant browser? No. (Heck, I don't think they could do it if they want) But it's not the public's responsibility for progressing the web; that responsibility falls...
View ArticleComment from Thomas Messier
I think it would be nice for IE to comply with standards for the simple fact that I think it would make their offering better and more customers happy. The average user wouldn't see the difference (no...
View ArticleComment from Emil
James: That is all people here is telling Jonathan tha answer on his topic "Aren't people tired of arguing?". And as you may have seen, the answer is No! ... haha
View ArticleComment from James Mathias
What I find intriguing is that no one got the point of this article... lol.
View ArticleComment from acts_as_flinn
flame bate! The problem with your argument seems to me that since IE is included with Windows it isn't really free. It is a part of the operating system that they claim to support. My biggest problem...
View ArticleComment from Jonathan Snook
I seriously don't mind IE6. In IE7, alpha png and fixed positioning were my two biggest desires. I'd still like display:table but I've been able to live without it. Take a look at the CSS for this site...
View ArticleComment from kimblim
Reg: What monopoly are you talking about? The monopoly they "earned" by making software that was either better or easier to use than that of their competitors? It's not like all governments across the...
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