Short answer: if you can submit patches that improveIE 5 compatibility without harming other browsers, we'd be happy to incorporate them. I doubt you'll find any committers interested in tackling this problem on their own, and like the page says, Trinidad has not been tested against IE 5, so there are no guarantees that you'd be able to make it work at all.
-- Adam On 9/6/07, Nebinger, David <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > Stephen Friedrich wrote: > > > > > > Now I have two choices: > > > I either fulfill this requirement or I try and pick a fight. > > <devils_advocate> > > And apparently, since everyone in your organization is > > equally lazy, the guidelines will stay fixed forever. :) > > </devils_advocate> > > I think you folks are being way to hard on this guy. Browser version > support typically is driven by outside forces... You need to know who > your user base is and what kind of browsers they have. > > I'm part of a 3PL, one that works with many mom-n-pop trucking > companies. I count myself lucky if those folks have a computer at all, > let alone a modern one with a 6.0 or greater IE. Sure, I could say to > them 'you need to upgrade', but they could turn around and tell me they > don't want my business, something that I need to have. > > I'd love to tell everyone to use firefox (as it is more modern and > secure), but the choice is not mine to make, it is the end users' > choice. > > Oh, and don't overlook the fact that many govt sites still require IE > 5.5 (some even list 5.01 as the required version)... >

