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Also note that every year is the year of "Linux on the desktop," yet Linux is still at 1% of usage on Zeitgeist.
I don't like IE either, but come on. There is no "recent mass migration."
Originally posted by Havok@Aug 9 2004, 04:23 PM
Give it some time, Brian "brainwashed" me into getting it, I thought it was good for a while, until I realized more and more problems with it.
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Originally posted by pissedoffsol+Aug 9 2004, 02:55 PM-->hardly... and it just shows your ignorance.
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not true.. shows how much i dont like it.. I dont know about your shop B but i know here in the Fed(s) we have to develop for IE. (almost positive 99% *about the percentage of people using ie over FF lol* that you do too)
i have to develop for IE at work but at home i have to develop for all browsers. I earned the right to say i hate FF and pretty much all those other browsers.. people bitch so much about IE but their the for runners in most everything. and with ie 7 (if and when) im sure it will regain the lead.
I dont need to run FF to keep myself secure i know enough about computers to do that.
Havok@Aug 9 2004, 03:23 PM
Give it some time, Brian "brainwashed" me into getting it, I thought it was good for a while, until I realized more and more problems with it.
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Originally posted by pissedoffsol@Aug 9 2004, 03:05 PM
wow! even a chevy guy can appreicate it
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Originally posted by pissedoffsol@Aug 9 2004, 05:53 PM
Don't take this the wrong way, but... if you knew how to code, you would learn to hate IE too.
you're one of the webmasters who still think image rollovers for text are cool, tables are for layout, and stuff like that.
great-Â that was all fine and well... in 99.
thinkgs change
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Tables should not be used purely as a means to layout document content as this may present problems when rendering to non-visual media. Additionally, when used with graphics, these tables may force users to scroll horizontally to view a table designed on a system with a larger display. To minimize these problems, authors should use style sheets to control layout rather than tables.
This document specifies HTML 4.01, which is part of the HTML 4 line of specifications. The first version of HTML 4 was HTML 4.0 [HTML40], published on 18 December 1997 and revised 24 April 1998.