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- #26
Is this still true regarding Chrome/Chromium: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ncerhCLi2o0&feature=player_embedded?
OH said:Somehow www/firefox-i18n will not function anymore with the update to 10. I have yet to investigate...
Most corporations are the worst when it comes to marking up web sites and typically gear it toward one browser (Internet Explorer is the worst) then can't figure out why it doesn't work in modern browsers.throAU said:Internal intranet style apps.
That proves what I said. IE is technically, by far, the worst browser on the planet, yet you'll find most corporate apps designed using it. A huge mistake they are now paying for.throAU said:IE works with virtually everything in the corporate space.
throAU said:It doesn't matter that it is the page's fault. That software is not going away. It is far simpler to just not use opera, than rewrite every app on the corporate intranet.
drhowarddrfine said:I understand that. I just didn't want anyone to think this was any one browser's fault.
On a side note, this is why web developers preach coding to web standards and not to any one browser.
overmind said:Is this still true regarding Chrome/Chromium: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ncerhCLi2o0&feature=player_embedded?
Not quite. Passwords are encrypted.jrm said:Here is a concern that I think is specific to Chromium. If you use their browser sync for all your data (browser history, passwords, cookies, etc) this information is sent to the google servers unecrypted.
sossego said:I think the Mozilla developers need to get their heads out of their arses and support more architectures than the basic i386 and amd64.
sossego said:I think the Mozilla developers need to get their heads out of their arses and support more architectures than the basic i386 and amd64.
drhowarddrfine said:Extended support has been, or will be, stretched to 12 months for enterprise users.
jrm said:Maybe you could volunteer.
drhowarddrfine said:It took enterprises 10 years to get rid of IE6, and some still haven't, so I guess there is no hope for them. IE10 will begin a 12-month cycle for Microsoft so I guess they're screwed.
IE9 does not run on XP. IE10 won't work on anything less than Windows8 (or is it 7?).throAU said:IE9 still works with IE6 designed sites just fine (haven't tested IE10 yet), and IE updates are included in the OS.
Not for long. IE9 will be pushed soon.IE7 and IE8 are still supported.
They already have made inroads which is why they are extending the support to 12 months. Like I said before, they aren't doing anything different than what Chrome does now and Microsoft will be doing shortly.Until the FF guys get that, they aren't going to make inroads into corporate space.
About eight years ago, I said IE would be a minor browser by now. I was almost, somewhat correct. Back then it had 95% market share. Today it's hovering just above 50% and falling. Not too shabby a prediction.Note, this is a fairly windows centric point of view, but consider this as "phase 1" of getting rid of IE on the desktop. Once IE is irrelevant, that's another reason to run Windows, gone.