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Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
I've seen a lot of articles, rants and techie editorials about how the widespread use of IE6 is holding back web development. Now there's a web site and a movement: IE6 No More! A lot of small web companies have signed on, and there are rumors a-swirling that YouTube, Digg and Facebook are either phasing out IE6 support or will do so soon.
So what do Orgahs think? A lot of people use IE6 because that's all they are allowed at work, especially in companies that sank real money into web apps back in the heyday of Internet Explorer. Should post-at-workers be denied the glory of ImageShack?
Will this segregate the web, or will this be the kick in the heiney that IT departments need to get on a modern browser?
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
It's currently at internet explorer 8.
Get out the way, grandma!
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Beskar
It's currently at internet explorer 8.
Get out the way, grandma!
I believe this is a standards compliancy / non standard extentions issue. There are pages that don't work with other browsers, not through fault of those browsers but due to the fact that those pages were developed for IE6 and MS' non standard browser extensions. This affects companies even more due to certain bespoke or coporate software that runs in a browser window that will only display/work correctly if run in MS IE.
This is effectively causing IE6 to hang on, especially in the business sector, where it should clearly be dead and buried. Why some companies don't upgrade to IE7 or IE8 is beyond me, as surely their craptastic html based CRM software should work perfectly in those later IE versions, unless MS have gone totally Open Standards Compliant and ditched all support for non standard?
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
Internet Exploder hasn't been superior to Netscape/Mozilla since 5 lost it's position.
The problem is and has been MS writes it's own damn 'standards' and then tries to push them on the rest of the industry. They have the exact same arrogance and stupidity regarding their own proprietary nonsense that they can even make Sony look bad. Thankfully the rest of the industry has enough clout and share that it is no longer at MS's whim, or at least as it used to be.
The issue I've always heard about IE that makes it so nasty is that it leaves connections open to the web servers. This is what made it so much faster back in versions 4 and 5 than the other alternatives. While it was great for the user and did tend to speed things up a bit, it created much more strain on web servers by behaving poorly. The Fasterfox plugin (which I use :sweatdrop: ) does some of the same things, in that it can configure the client browser to misbehave and increase load on webservers.
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
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Kill all MS right now. Or just split it into at least three. What good are the dems if they're not planning to do it anyway? :shrug:
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
Well, I was under the impression that IE8 is a big improvement. It's the corporations and grandmas clinging to IE6 that are the real problem ...
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Lemur
Well, I was under the impression that IE8 is a big improvement. It's the corporations and grandmas clinging to IE6 that are the real problem ...
nah. ie8 is still much slower than firefox.
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
I'm not a big fan of the new IE either, use it only when I have to.
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
What's "Internet Explorer?" ~;p
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
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Originally Posted by
Vladimir
What's "Internet Explorer?" ~;p
from the urban dictionary:
Quote:
A simple Windows XP tool which allows the user to browse to Mozilla.com and download Firefox, a web browser.
As soon as I installed XP I opened Internet Explorer and grabbed the latest version of Firefox.
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Hooahguy
:laugh4:
Guilty!
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
Ahh, that reminds me of a particularly obscenity-inducing anecdote back when IE was at the height of its worthlessness. I had just finished a re-format of my computer and I thought "oh, I'll just use it until I get firefox. Well, wouldn't you know, Murphy's law, I closed out of IE and thought everything was fine, until my homepage was changed; I knew something was up. Repetitive browsers opened up, a new one every second, and my worst fears were confirmed: spyware. And, being younger (probably 8th grade or so) the only remedy I knew was another reformat. Ever since that day I have vowed never to use the accursed IE again! I have been using firefox for probably four or five years now and have never, ever had any problem with security save maybe once.
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
Microsoft responds, sort of. It's all about choice, don't'cha know.
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
Almost half of IE's 60-70% share is IE6 according to Net App. Ridiculous that it's still in use. It's a horrible browser for the modern web.
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
It's what you get for telling people to skip Vista... :clown:
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
I like the I can't computer and Need more Java Googles.
I'm going to use that in regular conversation now.
"Hey pever why did you do x?"
"Oh, I needed more Java Googles."
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
Apparently Best-buys application system doesn't accept IE 8. Or IE 7.
http://imgur.com/0Hqqd.png
:dizzy2: :wall:
CR
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Re: Internet Explorer 6: If It Bleeds, We Can Kill It
Clearly Best Buy needs more Java Googles. But they're in good company -- Microsoft's Games For Windows system freaks out if you approach it with the most recent version of IE. See, even the people who make it can't support it.