Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 12th Jun 2009 13:55 UTC
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RE[2]: What does this tell us? - depends on the busines
by sbergman27 on Fri 12th Jun 2009 21:31
in reply to "RE: What does this tell us? - depends on the business"
I agree but it also depends on the business. In a previous position, the business is limited by many webapps that break unless you use IE6. A freaking enterprise class organization and they're crippled by IE6. No IE7. IE8; forget about it.
Agreed that this likely varies from business area to business area. Since my customers run Linux desktops, the IE6 fetish you describe actually ameliorates my situation, at least by a bit. I rely upon Crossover Office for the IE sessions. And while IE6 is a supported app, IE7 and later are not.
Of course, as an admin with a conscience, setting this up for my users is actually contributing to the problem. But what choice do I really have?
Edited 2009-06-12 21:33 UTC
RE[3]: What does this tell us? - depends on the busines
by jabbotts on Fri 12th Jun 2009 22:21
in reply to "RE[2]: What does this tell us? - depends on the busines"





Member since:
2007-09-06
I agree but it also depends on the business. In a previous position, the business is limited by many webapps that break unless you use IE6. A freaking enterprise class organization and they're crippled by IE6. No IE7. IE8; forget about it.
On the other hand, one of the first changes at a business after that was installing Firefox thanks to click happy users and IE7 being left wide open for a few weeks. The .net vulnerability injection has reduced that solutions effectiveness though.