2008/12/13 Richard Heyes <rich...@php.net>:
>> As long as Chrome is not being bundled with new computers the average
>> Windows users will stick to Internet Explorer. I know that from
>> customers who are referring to IE as "the program on my computer's
>> desktop running the internet". So if Google can manage to transform
>> Chrome into the "internet program" M$ might be forced to make IE9
>> support Richard's HTML5 graphing.
>
> Just to add, you could feasibly use the graphs on a website where IE
> compatibility isn't a requirement. So an internal website or intranet
> where you can stipulate that people need to be using Firefox, Opera,
> Chrome or Safari.
>

Just to add, you could just stop coding for IE and alert users that IE
is not a supported browser. The longer we bend over backwards trying
to support that browser, the longer we will make each other suffer. I
am in the terrific position of coding websites as a profitable hobby
and not as a profession, so I can afford to pick and choose, but I
argue that professional web developers can simply leave out non-IE
features for the IE-using public. If we stop acting like IE
compatibility is the holy grain of web design then our customers will
have no reason to think that either.

-- 
Dotan Cohen

http://what-is-what.com
http://gibberish.co.il

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