
Coming January, Windows 7 will make its big debut in the form of the first public beta release. However, just as with any other pre-final Windows build, it has
already been leaked onto various torrent websites, and Paul Thurrot, everyone's favourite Microsoft zealot ["...hopefully Web site owners will get serious about getting ready for the next IE and correct these issues." Wait, what?], has written
a review of this new beta. He concludes:
"In use, Windows 7 is fairly unexceptional in the sense that, yes, it has some nice improvements over Windows Vista, but, no, none of them are particularly major changes. In this sense, Windows 7 is much like your typical Microsoft Office release, a nicely tweaked version of the previous release. (Cue the obvious Steven Sinofsky anecdote here, I guess.) That said, Windows Vista is clearly in need of a spit-shine, not to mention a public execution, and Windows 7 will provide Microsoft with a way to do both."
Member since:
2006-12-21
So... what's your source on that?
http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_stats.asp
What I was trying to get at was the fact that his argument can't hold up because the browser market is very close between FF and IE, so if you code standard for one or the other you're screwing half of the Internet basically. If everyone coded their browsers to a single standard and everyone coded their websites to the same standard the world would be a much better place.
And I'm no stranger to sarcasm sir.