> In a lot of the work I do these days I have to support IE6 because it's
> the defacto browser in various government departments. It'll be sometime
> before it is completely ousted.
Rob, same is for me, I have to deal with this "browser" all problems it has
every single day, 'cause financial
Andrea Giammarchi wrote:
At that point I would consider IE6 "broke".
Hahah... it was broken at the starting gate... probably by design.
Every standard conformance test can tell you since years that IE6 is broken. At that
point, you'll be exactly in the same situation, if your customers do
> At that point I would consider IE6 "broke".
Every standard conformance test can tell you since years that IE6 is broken. At
that point, you'll be exactly in the same situation, if your customers do not
want to update for same reason they are not doing right now, why would you
leave them "al
> I bought a Windows XP PC about three years ago with IE6 on it (I
> normally do all my work in Linux). I haven't upgraded it, and I can't
> imagine why the average user would. If it ain't broke (and most users
> wouldn't consider IE6 broken), don't fix it.
I agree in general, but eventually Micro
I wonder what should happen if your customers will ask you PHP 3 applications
because their internal server is that old ... and I mean your *current*
application for PHP3 ... well, IE 6 has the same impact for the Web Development.
I am not saying we can dismiss its support, specially if we work
t; > -Original Message-
> > > From: Philip Thompson [mailto:philthath...@gmail.com]
> > > Sent: Thursday, September 17, 2009 1:56 PM
> > > To: PHP General list
> > > Subject: Re: [PHP] ie6 "memory could not be read" help!
> > >
>
On Thu, Sep 17, 2009 at 12:56:09PM -0500, Philip Thompson wrote:
> On Sep 17, 2009, at 4:04 AM, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
>
>> On Thu, 2009-09-17 at 16:41 +0800, Shelley wrote:
>>> Hi all,
>>>
>>> With IE6,
>>>
>>> After the pages i developed was loaded, there seems to be no problem,
>>> but when you
age that still use it.
>
>
> Thank you,
> Marc Hall
> HallMarc Websites
> 610.446.3346
>
> > -Original Message-
> > From: Philip Thompson [mailto:philthath...@gmail.com]
> > Sent: Thursday, September 17, 2009 1:56 PM
> > To: PHP General list
> &
> have IE 6 for whatever reason. If you block them then you are blocking
> possible clients. There is still a large percentage that still use it.
I think that percentage depends on the target audience. There was a
kerfuffle several months back (maybe a year ago now?) when 37signals
announced that
age-
> From: Philip Thompson [mailto:philthath...@gmail.com]
> Sent: Thursday, September 17, 2009 1:56 PM
> To: PHP General list
> Subject: Re: [PHP] ie6 "memory could not be read" help!
>
> On Sep 17, 2009, at 4:04 AM, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
>
> > On Thu,
On Thu, 2009-09-17 at 12:56 -0500, Philip Thompson wrote:
> On Sep 17, 2009, at 4:04 AM, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
>
> > On Thu, 2009-09-17 at 16:41 +0800, Shelley wrote:
> >> Hi all,
> >>
> >> With IE6,
> >>
> >> After the pages i developed was loaded, there seems to be no problem,
> >> but when yo
On Sep 17, 2009, at 4:04 AM, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
On Thu, 2009-09-17 at 16:41 +0800, Shelley wrote:
Hi all,
With IE6,
After the pages i developed was loaded, there seems to be no problem,
but when you then click a link, refresh the page, etc. it shows
"memory
could not be 'read'" error m
On Thu, 2009-09-17 at 16:41 +0800, Shelley wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> With IE6,
>
> After the pages i developed was loaded, there seems to be no problem,
> but when you then click a link, refresh the page, etc. it shows "memory
> could not be 'read'" error message.
>
> However, when you load other sit
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