Slide 1

Slide 1 text

Oh, IE6, how we loved you. Nous ♥ Bruce Lawson

Slide 2

Slide 2 text

Ancient history

Slide 3

Slide 3 text

No content

Slide 4

Slide 4 text

Evil sys admins

Slide 5

Slide 5 text

Evil Enterprise Software vendors

Slide 6

Slide 6 text

IE6 funeral etc

Slide 7

Slide 7 text

No content

Slide 8

Slide 8 text

October 1998

Slide 9

Slide 9 text

For the Good of the Web: An Open Letter to Netscape (20 July 2000) TWO YEARS AGO, when your market share was still high as a kite, you pledged to fully support five key standards in the next version of your browser... At last you are talking about shipping product by the end of the year. Sounds great – except that it’s the wrong year.

Slide 10

Slide 10 text

Continuing to periodically “upgrade” your old browser while failing to address its basic flaws has made it appear that you still consider Navigator 4 viable. It is not. ... keeping your 4.0 browser on the market has forced developers to continue writing bad code in order to support it. If you fail now, the web will essentially belong to a single company. And for once, nobody will be able to blame them for “competing unfairly.” So please, for your own good, and the good of the web, deliver on your promises while Netscape 6 still has the chance to make a difference.

Slide 11

Slide 11 text

No content

Slide 12

Slide 12 text

No content

Slide 13

Slide 13 text

No content

Slide 14

Slide 14 text

Internet Explorer 6 beta shows great promise www.techrepublic.com/article/internet-explorer-6-beta-shows-great-promise/1033023

Slide 15

Slide 15 text

No content

Slide 16

Slide 16 text

Microsoft Internet Explorer offers few quirks and many superb features... After introducing IE-only layout features such as scrolling marquees and colored table borders in earlier versions, Microsoft is now committed to the standards set by the World Wide Web Consortium. www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,541298,00.asp

Slide 17

Slide 17 text

No content

Slide 18

Slide 18 text

WaSP IE6 for Windows delivers fine support for HTML 4, CSS-1, and other important W3C standards. web.archive.org/web/20011201032740/http://www.webstandards.org/upgrade/

Slide 19

Slide 19 text

No content

Slide 20

Slide 20 text

I Love This Browser! I have loved browsing the web since I started way back in the mid 90s, and I really love browsing with IE.

Slide 21

Slide 21 text

I Love This Browser! I have loved browsing the web since I started way back in the mid 90s, and I really love browsing with IE. Scott Stearns Test Manager, IE blogs.msdn.com/b/ie/archive/2004/07/21/190747.aspx

Slide 22

Slide 22 text

No content

Slide 23

Slide 23 text

(Artist's Impression)

Slide 24

Slide 24 text

● DOCTYPE switching (for broken box model) ● HTML Components (.htc files) ● CSS Expressions ● Coloured scroll bars ● IE filters and DHTML behaviors ●

Slide 25

Slide 25 text

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/biz/2010/05/123_52401.html

Slide 26

Slide 26 text

Why?

Slide 27

Slide 27 text

Hell is other browsers "The browser is a really hostile programming environment."

Slide 28

Slide 28 text

No content

Slide 29

Slide 29 text

No content

Slide 30

Slide 30 text

No content

Slide 31

Slide 31 text

Ipad pic, tweet "ipad = IE4"

Slide 32

Slide 32 text

No content

Slide 33

Slide 33 text

No content

Slide 34

Slide 34 text

No content

Slide 35

Slide 35 text

No content

Slide 36

Slide 36 text

Let's face facts: the Web will never be the dominant platform. . It would help if all the rendering engines but one were to die, but even that would not be enough. Even if WebKit was the only game in town, it would still be crucial for it to have competent, sympathetic, benevolent leaders. joehewitt.com/2011/09/22/web-technologies-need-an-owner

Slide 37

Slide 37 text

32% developers want monoculture http://urtak.is/vOtBLj

Slide 38

Slide 38 text

-webkit-box-shadow -webkit-transform -webkit-transform-origin -webkit-border-radius -webkit-border-top-left-radius -webkit-border-top-right-radius -webkit-border-bottom-left-radius -webkit-border-bottom-right-radius -webkit-transition -webkit-transition-delay -webkit-transition-duration -webkit-transition-property -webkit-transition-timing-function -webkit-linear-gradient

Slide 39

Slide 39 text

No content

Slide 40

Slide 40 text

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Browser_wars#The_first_browser_war

Slide 41

Slide 41 text

No content

Slide 42

Slide 42 text

Ipad pic, tweet "ipad = IE4"

Slide 43

Slide 43 text

The principles of universality of access irrespective of hardware or software platform, network infrastructure, language, culture, geographical location, or physical or mental impairment are core values Tim Berners-Lee

Slide 44

Slide 44 text

brucel@opera.com opera.com/developer www.brucelawson.co.uk @brucel

Slide 45

Slide 45 text

Images To the best of my knowledge, images are public domain, or fair use for parody. Groundhog Day covers are neither, but it is a marvellous, marvellous film and you should all buy copies for all your family.