Domain: ie6nomore.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to ie6nomore.com.
Comments · 8
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Re:One has to wonder
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a little late
i wrote a post about this a couple days ago http://j.mp/aEJZnO i point to http://ie6nomore.com/ and agree with the first comment. im not going to bend over backwards to try and get ie6 when im also dealing with quirks of ie8,firefox and chrome... write it as best to standards as i can and unless the client wants to pay more let those few little rendering errors slide
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Squeeze Them
Don't explicitly break IE6/7, just don't kill yourself to making your site 100% compatible.
Use IE6NoMore
As for corporate sites...I haven't seen much of an issue, honestly. The last few big corps I've worked with that still use IE6 also have Firefox installed. Yes, their desktop machines come with 2 browsers and IE6 is used almost explicitly with a couple of legacy apps that rely on ActiveX.
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Re:Everyone should do this
I'm in the process of building a personal website as I'm planning a new career in web development and I can point to that as evidence I know what I'm doing. I'm thinking that the best thing to do is include the code from http://www.ie6nomore.com/ to notify IE6 users that they need to upgrade to be able to use the site properly, but I'm interested to know what others would do.
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ie6nomore ftw!
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Enough is enough!
I'm uploading the IE6 No More code to my website now. There's a point where users of outdated software need to be told there's four major cost-free options, including a much updated version of IE if they want to stick with IE. I'm almost thinking we should move from a warning to a service-denying error if this goes much further.
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IE6 no more
http://www.ie6nomore.com/
Cure the pox. 'nuff said. -
Business is Business
Totally agree that people should upgrade, but... they just don't.
And websites don't want to chance losing business because a potential customer hit their site and it didn't work.It's amazing how far people will go to NOT upgrade. I remember going to a Ford plant once setting up favorites on a few people's machines pointing to an old IIS3 ASP app we wrote. They sent me over to one dark corner of the plant where the engineer had a PC running Windows 3.1 and an ancient version of Netscape.
If your website can survive without the IE6 consumers, you can get rid of them:
http://www.ie6nomore.com/