Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 15th Jun 2008 22:40 UTC
Internet Explorer "Internet Explorer 8 is set to be Microsoft's most standards compliant browser ever. After originally stating that IE8 would default to the same non-compliant behavior exhibited by IE7, Microsoft relented and plumped for standard-by-default. The first beta of IE8 was released in March and it did indeed default to standards compliance. Web developers have been clamouring for standards compliance for a long time; IE is a long way behind the competition, requiring considerable hacks and workarounds to get pages working properly. IE8 should make things a lot better - but it will still fall far short of the standards set by Firefox, Safari, and Opera. Some of these problems are technical, but others are cultural. Where the other browser developers are open and communicative, Microsoft is still leaving web developers in the dark."
Permalink for comment 318546
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
RE[3]: I am confused
by linumax on Mon 16th Jun 2008 05:08 UTC in reply to "RE[2]: I am confused"
linumax
Member since:
2007-02-07

-->There is nothing immature about pointing out the flaws in both Microsoft's products and their business practices.

Pointing out flaws is of course not immature, except when the flaw pointed out does not exist as in the case of OP.

-->As long as Microsoft's browser remains as closed and tied to proprietary crap as it currently is, it will always be the most useless browser of the bunch.

If by closed you meant closed source = crap, then I beg to differ and provide Opera as proof.

Regarding "tied to proprietary crap" I would be very much interested and appreciative if you enlighten me what exactly constitutes this proprietary crap. My sole objection of the kind was ActiveX (from a security standpoint) which have been already dealt with in IE7.

The only major issue remaining, web standards support, is supposed to be resolved in IE8.

Personally, I will not fancy the idea of using IE as I am so dependent on several Firefox extensions that my whole computing experience will take an unfortunate dive if I switch. Yet, calling IE useless as a browser, especially for the common 'internets' user is, at the very best, unjustified.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 6