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Liam Dilley
Inspiring
May 5, 2022

If no one is charging extra for IE compatability yet... GO GO GO.

We have for a while now charged clients extra if they want their project to work in IE. We tell them we work with latest standards and that if they want x and y like working on machines in offices with IE - Its extra and not cheap. You still get the work and how much they care is actually way less than what they make out at the start knowing it will cost them.

 

Note:

I say latest tech but no. Unless your a design based all out you will be doing very cutting edge CSS and JS technoligies which not all browsers have full support for or partial support for. They also may support them but those standards are changing even weekly. CSS Grid for example is still evolving and breaking sites with those updates to browsers.

So you got to consider the client and market and know how far to push.

Nancy OShea
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 5, 2022

I stopped worrying about IE users a long time ago. 

 

 

 

Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert
BenPleysier
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 1, 2022

Edge and Bing, what a fantastic combination. 👍

Wappler is the DMXzone-made Dreamweaver replacement and includes the best of their powerful extensions, as well as much more!
Legend
April 30, 2022

Still one of the best logos though, shame to see that go.

 

I dont like these new 'psychedelic' logos myself, the edge logo looks more like its to do with the sea. I guess its related to 'surfing' but it reminds me of surfing the sea not the internet.

 

EDITED

Actually the IE logo fluctuated over time:

 

https://1000logos.net/internet-explorer-logo/

 

The best most effective and simplest one was between 2012 - 2015 was kind of a upgrade to the 1997-2001 version. I dont like the last version with the yellow circle, that's when 'kiddies' started designing logos and thought they needed gradient effects. 

Nancy OShea
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 30, 2022

Nice logo but I'm not sad to see IE go away permanently.  For decades, it was nothing but problems for web developers.

 

Google Chrome is having problems of their own:

  • Google announced Chrome was successfully hacked, revealing 30 security flaws.
  • Seven of those flaws are considered 'high' risk to users and affects Windows, macOS, and Linux.
  • The browser will automatically update within a few days and users can manually update it now if wanted. 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10761553/Google-says-Chrome-browser-successfully-targeted-hackers.html

 

Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert
Legend
April 30, 2022
quote

Nice logo but I'm not sad to see IE go away permanently.  For decades, it was nothing but problems for web developers.

 

Google Chrome is having problems of their own:

  • Google announced Chrome was successfully hacked, revealing 30 security flaws.
  • Seven of those flaws are considered 'high' risk to users and affects Windows, macOS, and Linux.
  • The browser will automatically update within a few days and users can manually update it now if wanted. 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10761553/Google-says-Chrome-browser-successfully-targeted-hackers.html

 


By @Nancy OShea

 

Time moves on, nothing is forever. I guess IE was what it was at the time, reluctant to adhere to anything but their own standards. Things are certainly better now in that area. 

 

The story about Google being hacked broke a few days ago in the UK.............hummm scary. Looks like mine just updated itself.