Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 18th Dec 2012 00:03 UTC
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RE[8]: Comment by shmerl
by lucas_maximus on Tue 18th Dec 2012 14:49
in reply to "RE[7]: Comment by shmerl"
That's how all software works. That's how version numbering works. It's not unique to IE, it's what everyone expects and not something specific to enterprise customers.
Except in the web browser world it doesn't work like that. Chrome for example worked fine with Sitecore CMS system backend until a month ago, now it doesn't work ... because Chrome has ramped the version. It still works in IE10.
Whether the backend should work in Chrome is another argument entirely.
Plus it's not even what enterprise customers request. They usually require support for a number of years and often across a range of versions. Which, to be fair, is something Microsoft are generally good at.
Yes so you code for a feature set in version X and that is supported until version Z. Which is exactly what I said.
Edited 2012-12-18 14:51 UTC
RE[9]: Comment by shmerl
by Laurence on Tue 18th Dec 2012 14:59
in reply to "RE[8]: Comment by shmerl"
Except in the web browser world it doesn't work like that. Chrome for example worked fine with Sitecore CMS system backend until a month ago, now it doesn't work ... because Chrome has ramped the version. It still works in IE10.
Exactly. Chrome incremented a version.
What you're actually complaining about is how often some browsers see updates. That's a different debate entirely.
Yes so you code for a feature set in version X and that is supported until version Z. Which is exactly what I said.
It's what you said, but not what you're arguing. All (read: ALL) software works this way. That's the whole f--king point of version numbers. What you're bitching about is the frequency that some browsers update. And that argument is an often debated topic.
Edited 2012-12-18 15:02 UTC





Member since:
2007-03-26
Microsoft says "IE will support these features"
IE supports those features and newer features aren't added until a new version of the browser.
That's how all software works. That's how version numbering works. It's not unique to IE, it's what everyone expects and not something specific to enterprise customers.
Plus it's not even what enterprise customers request. They usually require support for a number of years and often across a range of versions. Which, to be fair, is something Microsoft are generally good at.
Edited 2012-12-18 14:46 UTC