informationweek.com— WebSideStory analyst: "Maybe Microsoft's met its match with Firefox. Maybe it just can't compete against open-source and the whole world [as developers]."
Jan 16, 2007View in Crawl 4
> It has some really good features.Like not rendering XHTML pages correctly, having problems with Java Applets and instead working with that insecure Active-X and still not having a properly working java script implementation. Yeah, those are really nice features!
i havent seen many comments about the UI in IE7. WTF did they do to the refresh and stop bottons. you figure that they would at least be smart enough to leave them where people are used to finding them.
Because I can highlight words and search google, or amazon, or ebay, or yahoo, or creative commons, or flickr tags, or site adviser, or torrentspy, or wikipedia, or food channel recipes, or answers.com, or youtube. dammit, too many.
Closed AccountJan 17, 2007
there are still people that are using internet explorer? why?!
h4rdcoreJan 17, 2007
> It has some really good features.Like not rendering XHTML pages correctly, having problems with Java Applets and instead working with that insecure Active-X and still not having a properly working java script implementation. Yeah, those are really nice features!
hiikeebaJan 17, 2007
I recently installed IE7. I didn't have a choice. M$ forced me to with an automatic update. That's a sure fire way to increase downloads!
zbeastJan 17, 2007
Microsoft don't confuse forced downloads with popularity.By that logic, spyware, mallware, virus and spam are popular.
mjwildcatJan 17, 2007
i havent seen many comments about the UI in IE7. WTF did they do to the refresh and stop bottons. you figure that they would at least be smart enough to leave them where people are used to finding them.
burritoking924Jan 18, 2007
Because I can highlight words and search google, or amazon, or ebay, or yahoo, or creative commons, or flickr tags, or site adviser, or torrentspy, or wikipedia, or food channel recipes, or answers.com, or youtube. dammit, too many.