MSFN Forum: What's the deal with browsers recently? - MSFN Forum

Jump to content


Think before posting!

If your post is even remotely technical in nature, it probably doesn't belong here. Take another look at the forums and try to find the *right* location before posting a technical question here.
  • 2 Pages +
  • 1
  • 2
  • You cannot start a new topic
  • You cannot reply to this topic

What's the deal with browsers recently? ( Invasion on privacy - who do they think they are?! )

#21 User is offline   GrofLuigi 

  • GroupPolicy Tattoo Artist
  • PipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Members
  • Posts: 1,275
  • Joined: 21-April 05
  • OS:none specified
  • Country: Country Flag

Posted 12 July 2009 - 04:32 PM

Wow! I just saw this.

Fortunately, it will be fixed.

(I haven't experienced it.)

That was the idea of this thread - to report these things and possible fixes.

GL

* Edit: ProcMon confirmed it read the temp folder, IE's temporary internet files and fonts folder. I'm this close to erasing it.

* Edit2: I'm not paranoid, I just won't surrender to stupidity. :)

This post has been edited by GrofLuigi: 12 July 2009 - 04:53 PM



#22 User is offline   cluberti 

  • Gustatus similis pullus
  • Group: Supervisor
  • Posts: 11,208
  • Joined: 09-September 01
  • OS:Windows RT
  • Country: Country Flag

Posted 12 July 2009 - 06:16 PM

View PostCoffeeFiend, on Jul 12 2009, 12:36 PM, said:

as for web stantards, IE6 was truly horrible, but IE8 is getting better (not up to par, but "good enough" for now as most people still won't use anything that crappy old IE6 won't handle).
You forget IE6 was released way, way back in 2001 (3 years before Firefox 1.0, fwiw). It was the most standards-compliant browser of it's day, with the only other real clients available en masse being Opera and Netscape (which was crap by this point). I'm not saying IE6 was perfect (like keeping the broken 5.x CSS2 layout, etc), but it was the most standards-compliant browser available in it's day, in late 2001. At that time no shipping browser really supported CSS2 in any real, meaningful way (other than IE, Opera had decent CSS2 support, but even then not as much as IE6), and DOM2 wasn't ratified until 4 months before the IE6 beta if my memory serves, meaning IE6 didn't have support for it either (and to be fair, it took a few years for the others to get support for it as well, Opera 6 or 7 in 2003, again if I remember; a little fuzzy on the versions).

It's the 6 years Microsoft sat on IE6 without changing much of anything, and the fact that IE7 wasn't really a big leap in compliance with standards at the time either, that makes IE6 (and to a point, IE7) so "bad". Ultimately, I think people complaining about IE6 "sucking" and not being standards-compliant aren't complaining that it *was* horrible, they're complaining that it's still a pain to continue to support along with better browsers. I, for one, would love it if Microsoft would drop support for "old" browsers at 5 years (when the OS it shipped on leaves mainstream support, for example) rather than 10, because the way the web moves a 10 year old browser really *is* crap to have to support. Or, even better, treat it as a service pack - 24 months after the next one releases, drop mainstream (unpaid, non-premier) support for the old browser and "force" people to upgrade.

#23 User is offline   jaclaz 

  • The Finder
  • Group: Developers
  • Posts: 11,456
  • Joined: 23-July 04
  • OS:none specified
  • Country: Country Flag

Posted 13 July 2009 - 02:41 AM

Just to post a pretty picture:

Posted Image

"borrowed" by this site:
http://www.istartedsomething.com/20061103/...browser-review/

And, though probably a bit OT (but not much, as always ;)) the Google Chrome Comic:
http://blogoscoped.com/google-chrome/

jaclaz

#24 User is offline   Tripredacus 

  • K-Mart-ian Legend
  • Group: Super Moderator
  • Posts: 8,690
  • Joined: 28-April 06
  • OS:Server 2012
  • Country: Country Flag

Posted 13 July 2009 - 07:36 AM

View Postcluberti, on Jul 12 2009, 08:16 PM, said:

View PostCoffeeFiend, on Jul 12 2009, 12:36 PM, said:

as for web stantards, IE6 was truly horrible, but IE8 is getting better (not up to par, but "good enough" for now as most people still won't use anything that crappy old IE6 won't handle).
You forget IE6 was released way, way back in 2001 (3 years before Firefox 1.0, fwiw). It was the most standards-compliant browser of it's day, with the only other real clients available en masse being Opera and Netscape (which was crap by this point). I'm not saying IE6 was perfect (like keeping the broken 5.x CSS2 layout, etc), but it was the most standards-compliant browser available in it's day, in late 2001. At that time no shipping browser really supported CSS2 in any real, meaningful way (other than IE, Opera had decent CSS2 support, but even then not as much as IE6), and DOM2 wasn't ratified until 4 months before the IE6 beta if my memory serves, meaning IE6 didn't have support for it either (and to be fair, it took a few years for the others to get support for it as well, Opera 6 or 7 in 2003, again if I remember; a little fuzzy on the versions).

It's the 6 years Microsoft sat on IE6 without changing much of anything, and the fact that IE7 wasn't really a big leap in compliance with standards at the time either, that makes IE6 (and to a point, IE7) so "bad". Ultimately, I think people complaining about IE6 "sucking" and not being standards-compliant aren't complaining that it *was* horrible, they're complaining that it's still a pain to continue to support along with better browsers. I, for one, would love it if Microsoft would drop support for "old" browsers at 5 years (when the OS it shipped on leaves mainstream support, for example) rather than 10, because the way the web moves a 10 year old browser really *is* crap to have to support. Or, even better, treat it as a service pack - 24 months after the next one releases, drop mainstream (unpaid, non-premier) support for the old browser and "force" people to upgrade.


I agree. I remember when only IE 6 supported XSLT. Then IE7 didn't support it which is why I never upgraded at home.

#25 Guest_Maddy_*

  • Group: Guests

Posted 24 August 2011 - 08:45 PM

I just loaded the site in Opera 9 without a problem. The main site loaded and asked my to select a slot machine. I click on a coupe, at random and the following page loaded with a grey box in the middle. After a few seconds the grey box turned into the slot machine, which worked flawlessly.

First, make sure you have not disabled Java or Javascript...go Tools->Preferences->Advanced->Content and make sure both are checked. If that doesn't resolve it, try reinstalling the latest version of Java. The site should work with Opera from the start, so something's amiss here.

Share this topic:


  • 2 Pages +
  • 1
  • 2
  • You cannot start a new topic
  • You cannot reply to this topic

2 User(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 2 guests, 0 anonymous users



All trademarks mentioned on this page are the property of their respective owners
Copyright © 2001 - 2013 msfn.org
Privacy Policy