First post, by sliderider
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That's been common knowledge for quite some time now. 😉
GUIs and reviews of other random stuff
Вфхуи ZoPиЕ m
СФИРEt. SEPOHЖ
Chebzon фt Ymeztoix © 1959 zem
I find this hilarious for three reasons:
1. *I* primarily use IE, but I have other browsers installed just in case something doesn't work properly with it.
2. I have had more problems with Mozilla-based browsers, Opera, and Chrome, than I've ever had with IE.
3. Whenever I report website problems, people tell me to use a specific browser, likely the one they recommend to everyone and the ONLY one their website works perfectly with, since I've usually tested their site on at least IE and Firefox before contacting them.
Stereotypes are fun! :P
--- Kris Asick (Gemini)
--- Pixelmusement Website: www.pixelships.com
--- Ancient DOS Games Webshow: www.pixelships.com/adg
Previously they used to attack Microsoft. And now they started attacking it's users? Sigh.
What rubbish study is that? Some people have nothing better to do, I guess. 🤣
Just let people use what they are used to and like to use.
Netscape users prevail again!
@leileilol: Netscape users weren't even covered by the study. It was long dead before it started in 2006. Opera users are the winners here.
@Gemini: Many "website problems" are due to needing to code multiple versions of pages so they will work with the frequently non-standard IE. It's a significant hindrance coding something compliant with standards that works everywhere but IE, and then needing to re-tweak it endlessly to work around IE's flaws. From my web development days the sooner we can put IE in the grave the better.
And really, you don't even need IE if you have Opera anyway because the last time I checked, Opera had a IE emulation mode built in so sites that specifically check if you are using IE can be fooled.
One important thing to consider; we're not in the IE6 era anymore. IE has become a lot safer in recent years, though it's annoying limitations and lack of features remain.
I recall having watched many interviews with cream-of-the-crop scientists who happened to have computers on their desktops, and in several occasions I spotted IE maximized, displaying a relevant website.
I think it all comes down to how much you surf the web, and keeping an inferior browser for heavy surfing is stupid. That's what they should have taken into account for the test.
I believe a lot of IE6 users are corporate PC's that are stuck with IE6 due to compatibility issues with some application. Or perhaps simply lazy admins who haven't bothered to upgrade. In australia it seems a lot of government departments are still using IE6.
If you are squeamish, don't prod the beach rubble.
I'm happy with IE9.
Though on one of my netbooks I use Firefox (single core netbook with Ubuntu). On the dual core netbook (W7) I also have chrome. Khans Academy is really slow on IE. When you use the scratch pad, it lags and you can't write smoothly.
This works flawlessly on Firefox and Chrome.
My favorite browser has been Opera for the last years, ever since I found Firefox to start running more sluggishly.
"Studies" like these are fun, but everyone knows how bright they are, noone needs an internet browser for that 😜
Hmm, opposite here, I used Opera before but since have turned to Firefox only
the spirit of netscape lives on... in seamonkey
firefox is only a distant cousin considering it is radically different despite the fact that the underlying engine is the same as seamonkey
So nobody is using Safari? 🙁
that's for steve jobs fanboys
wrote:that's for steve jobs fanboys
It is available for PC.
For what it's worth:
If all else fails, use fire.
Over time I've used pretty much every windows compatible browser (and some that weren't), and I constantly come back to IE, Chrome, and dispite it's many let downs and overhype FF.
Infact, there were only a few browsers that I didn't like at all, so all in all, I'd say that this issue is built mostly around fanboyism and the occasional security hole.
Question now: does anyone still use the DOS browsers? Or did everyone else also take their older computers off the internet?
P.S. R.I.P. Netscape 🙁
i've never browsed http by dos, ever. not in '94, not ever. I begun on Win16 Mosaic then Win16 Netscape 0.9 or so with the Pulsating N.
I actually legitimately use lynx from time to time. It's not quite DOS, but linux terminal is pretty darn close for a browser seeing real-world live use.
Usually for when I have to troubleshoot something with a web interface on a network that doesn't permit inbound http, and over a link too slow for VNC or X Forwarding.
If all else fails, use fire.