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Funeral Being Held Today For IE6

An anonymous reader writes "More than 100 people, many of them dressed in black, are expected to gather around a coffin Thursday to say goodbye to an old friend. The deceased? Internet Explorer 6. The aging Web browser, survived by its descendants Internet Explorer 7 and Internet Explorer 8, is being eulogized at a tongue-in-cheek 'funeral' hosted by Aten Design Group, a design firm in Denver, Colorado."

4 of 194 comments (clear)

  1. Just remember... by Rufty · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Decapitate, stake through the heart, and bury underneath a crossroads, just to make sure it won't come back.

    --
    Red to red, black to black. Switch it on, but stand well back.
  2. Wishful thinking by mackil · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is all wishful thinking. Google ending support will not be the "final nail" in the proverbial coffin. IE 6 will continue to live in the corporate world (my own included unfortunately) for many years to come. This may be the first step, but its dancing before the music has started in my opinion.

  3. What a waste of time by strangemachinex · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What's wrong with these people?

  4. Re:Not dead for some... by BUL2294 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It didn't help that Microsoft didn't offer IE7 to Windows 2000 users. Sure, all W2K support ends in June, but not offering it artificially kept organizations on IE6...

    Why would it have been important? If you were running a mixed W2K-XP shop in the 2006-2009 era, 2006 being the first year of availability for IE7, you kept IE6 unless you wanted to spend big bucks to support two browser versions internally. W2K was still in wide corporate use in 2006-2007--IE7 and Office 2007 were the first major apps that wouldn't run on W2K...

    Personally, I think that not offering IE7 on W2K was a huge mistake... It would be the equivalent of Microsoft not offering IE8 on XP.

    --
    Windows 3.1x calc: 3.11 - 3.10 = 0.00