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kmportal says...

Internet Explorer must die! Снова.: ie internet mustdie Интернет Эксплорер, оказывается. теперь плохо дружит.. http://bit.ly/1kqkgz

Filed under: ie

tobym says...

I was testing a near-completion Drupal website today, and noticed that I could not log in with Internet Explorer (8). Firefox worked, Chrome worked, Safari worked...so what was the problem? Turns out there was an underscore in the domain name, and that gave IE fits. I changed the subdomain to use a dash instead, and the login worked.

Filed under: ie

simonbingham says...

To fix the IE fieldset background color overflow bug in Internet Explorer (IE) do the following.

---

fieldset {
    position: relative;
    margin: 0 0 1em 0;
    background: #ffffcc;
}

legend {
    position: absolute;
    top: -.5em;
    left: .2em;
}

Filed under: ie

Julia says...

Ok so you probably know eactly what a browser is and will have made an informed choice as to the one you are using right now (unless constrained by policies at work).
Ask your friends and family (you know - the ones who don't need to 'get a life' as they do actually already have one!) this question though and you might be surprised at their answers!

Filed under: IE

lukasztyrala says...

No browser is perfect as we can see, but some are definitely ahead. The
http://findmebyip.com/ is quite useful. It would be great to see it
detecting JavaScript, Flash and Java version also.

Filed under: ie

WanCW says...

<!-- [if IE]> (bad)
<!--[if IE]> (good) 

Filed under: IE

Filed under: IE

raulll says...

ballmer-chrome-frame

Steve Ballmer está com raiva. Muita raiva. Andou dizendo por aí que o Chrome e o Safari são um erro estatístico. O motivo? Aposto que foi o Chrome Frame.

O Google sabia que, com o lançamento do Wave, tinha um problema sério para resolver. O Internet Explorer, criticado por uma multidão, ainda é usado por muito mais gente. E todo esse pessoal, ávido por experimentar o serviço, iria se decepcionar ao descobrir que havia uma incompatibilidade com o navegador. Jogariam, inclusive, a culpa na empresa de Mountain View. Um maremoto de insatisfação estava se formando.

Não é de hoje que o Internet Explorer recebe críticas. O IE 6, considerado o pior browser da atualidade, ainda é dominante. Os webmasters ficam desesperados pelas limitações que o software impõe ao trabalho e às inovações. Mesmo o IE 8 não é totalmente compatível com HTML 5. Todo mundo reclamava, todo mundo xingava, mas ninguém tomava uma atitude. Foi aí que os engenheiros comandados por Larry Page e Sergey Brin resolveram dar uma patada na Microsoft.

O pensamento deve ter sido o seguinte: “Se todo mundo fala mal há anos e os caras não se tocam, nós vamos dar um jeito”. O pior é que eles conseguiram. O Google Chrome Frame roda dentro do IE sempre que um site pedir isso. A instalação é muito simples e deixa as versões 6, 7 e 8 do navegador muito melhores do que quando foram criadas. Para completar a provocação, o logo do Internet Explorer, localizado no canto superior esquerdo da janela, é trocado pelo símbolo do Chrome quando o plug-in está ativo.

Claro que Ballmer não gostou. Os desenvolvedores do IE também devem ter ficado irados. Afinal, foi como se uma alma penada tivesse possuído o programa. O pessoal da Microsoft tentou exorcizar o Chrome, dizendo que ele é perigoso. Mas os usuários não caíram nessa. Dessa vez, Ballmer deveria ter agradecido o trabalho prestado pelo Google. Afinal, não pagou nada por ele.

Foto: Luc Van Braekel/Flickr

Filed under: ie

nileshbabu says...

From humble beginning to intense browser war!

Filed under: ie

nick says...

Xbox360Big.jpg
We've seen social gatherings of women to sell products -- so-called "tupperware parties" -- for everything from sex toys to botox . But this might be the strangest one yet: Is Microsoft (MSFT) using tupperware parties to sell the Xbox 360? link »
That's what a report in Ft Myers, FL-based news-press.com (a Gannett (GCI) property) suggests. link »
On a recent Saturday, about 1,000 women across the country moonlighted as marketers for Microsoft's newest Xbox services. link »
"We've sold 20 million consoles to date globally since we launched three years ago," says Heather Snavely, Microsoft's director of interactive entertainment business global platforms. "In order to get to the next 20 million, we need to get a new audience of women and teens. We're going after them in ways that are different than ways we've done before." link »
Up till now we've been seeing Microsoft and Sony in an increasingly bitter struggle for the hearts and wallets of so-called "hardcore gamers" (think socially awkward males aged 17-25). Meanwhile, Nintendo (NTDOY) has reinvented the wheel with its Wii, crushing both of its competitors in sales by discovering a new, and much larger, market in games that appeal to casual gamers and women with its pick-up-and-play simplicity. link »
And what do women get for becoming Microsoft's ad-hoc sales force, and where does Microsoft find them? link »
They got an Xbox party pack of freebies that included microwaveable popcorn, Xbox trivia game "Scene It? Box Office Smash," an Xbox universal media remote control, a three-month subscription to Xbox Live, and 1,600 Xbox Live points (used for game, movie and TV show purchases). link »
Xbox found women including Maldonado and Chicago-area resident Danielle Jamil through a service called House Party, which sets up home parties for marketers. House Party has a database of 100,000 names of people who have provided a profile of personal information and who want to be "brand advocates." The advocates host a preplanned party to show off the marketer's brand to their friends. link »
Read: The whole shebang isn't costing Microsoft very much at all. link »

Filed under: ie