IE8 was designed to actually adhere to web standards, at least mostly. It should do a far better job at rendering accurately v. prior versions.Greatly to my surprise, it didn't break on any of Tannin's sites, which I didn't expect. MS browsers always break and the early beta IE8 version I had a very quick play with did break, easily.
Fair enough but you should test at least one WebKit browser against your site. It's popularity as an engine is on the rise. The smartphone I'm looking to buy shortly, for instance, has it wedded to the OS. Chrome uses WebKit. So maybe run that. It's actually a very lightweight browser; you might like it. If you're concerned about security issues, run it in a VM.By the way, I can't actually tell you what Safari does on our sites. The way I see it, anyone daft enough to run Apple software of their own free will has problems enough already; I doubt that they would notice their browser breaking if it flashed red and sent up smoke signals.
The problem with this is that many people who use their PCs for work cannot upgrade from IE6 due to application compatibility reasons. There are still plenty of apps in production that simply break on IE7 or newer and the PCs are forbidden from installing alternative browsers. Sure, this is an app design issue that should never have occurred, but it has and there's not much to be done about it until the apps can be upgraded or replaced.In the meantime, Tannin has officially announced that he will no longer support IE 6 on any of his sites. If you are too stupid to upgrade to a decent browser after all these years, then you probably couldn't read any of the longer words anyway, so who cares if your user experience is sub-normal? So are you.
During the last hacker congress (which I forgot the name), several among them pointed out that Chrome was by far the hardest to hack due to its design. It installs in the user's profile, not in program files, so it isn't granted a high-enough priority level to compromise the system. That doesn't mean it's bullet proof, but no matter the security issue it has/will have, the amount of damage that can be done through it is more limited than any other browser. From a security point of view, it is the most efficiently designed. You can skip Chrome for many reasons, but security is the least of them.As for Google Chrome, why would anyone want to bother? I haven't tried it, but what would be the point? It apparently has security problems of the same order of magnitude as Safari's...
IE8 was designed to actually adhere to web standards, at least mostly. It should do a far better job at rendering accurately v. prior versions.
Fair enough but you should test at least one WebKit browser against your site.
The problem with this is that many people who use their PCs for work cannot upgrade from IE6 due to application compatibility reasons. There are still plenty of apps in production that simply break on IE7 or newer and the PCs are forbidden from installing alternative browsers. Sure, this is an app design issue that should never have occurred, but it has and there's not much to be done about it until the apps can be upgraded or replaced.
I have to use Opera ..... And the goddamned thing still goes down more often than any other modern web browser.
Chrome will also have a useful plug-in architecture in version 2, something that Opera and Safari sadly lack.
The sooner IE6 vanishes from the face of the earth the better the world will be.
That maybe so, but then I wouldn't know because there is only one thing I want or use that Opera doesn't already have as standard (detailed EXIF viewer), and (of course) I have an Opera plug-in for that. With Firefox, you need plug-ins to make the damn thing usable, which is a dumb way to design a browser. I can't be bothered mucking about with all that add-on junk, I just like stuff that works without needing me to hand roll it.
Chrome will also have a useful plug-in architecture in version 2, something that Opera and Safari sadly lack.
IE8 has content blocking support and seems decent for page rendering, but the only reason I have to use Opera is if I need three simultaneous shopping carts on Newegg. Which, sadly, does happen from time to time. And the goddamned thing still goes down more often than any other modern web browser.
Stainless now has features you won't find in Chrome or in any other browser.
A prime example is parallel sessions, which allow you to log into a site using different credentials in separate tabs at the same time. This new technology is woven throughout Stainless, from the private cookie [COLOR=blue ! important][COLOR=blue ! important]storage [COLOR=blue ! important]system[/COLOR][/COLOR], to session-aware bookmarks that remember the session in which they were saved. We're excited to showcase what we believe is a true browser innovation.[/COLOR]
During the last hacker congress (which I forgot the name), several among them pointed out that Chrome was by far the hardest to hack due to its design.... From a security point of view, it is the most efficiently designed. You can skip Chrome for many reasons, but security is the least of them.
...pressing the compatibility button looses the content that is already there so I have to redo it and I don't like that (it never comes out the way I originally wrote it).
Copying to the clipboard first doesn't work for you? FWIW I have never had this issue (I use the quick reply unless quoting someone).
Installing IE8 via Windows Update caused me to have to re-activate my windows install on reboot. Weird.
Nah, it should be don't install IE8.Lesson learned: Only use versions of Windows that don't have activation.
Nah, it should be don't install IE8.
I'm trusting Obama to take care of me, not MS.But it's a critical update! The world will end unless everyone has it, like, now! How else can we count on Microsoft to guarantee our safety?
We'll check back with you in a few years and see if you still have that opinion.He'll do a damned sight better than that other group of fundie retards.
No -- It broke things.I read somewhere that IE8 broke things and it's better to stay away from it for now. Is everybody else saying the opposite here?
But that's not really saying much.IE8 is the most standards compliant version of IE yet.