Robert J Hantson wrote:
When did chrome suddenly become the browser of all browsers? I don't think I fully understand the point of the post here... As far as I can tell, IE is still just about the only browser that seems to have the least amount of problems rendering web-pages... all too often I see posts by people saying that "such and such" doesn't work in Firefox... (yet everyone seems to try to convince me that Firefox is the "universal" browser that supports the internet best)...
I guess I'm always going to be an IE user... Safari, Firefox... I have spent more time banging my head against the wall because these two browsers don't want to play right with the internet and ADD/ADHD users who think that Microsoft is out to get them...
I'm sure i read this wrong, but you said that IE has the 'least' amount of problems rendering pages? Surely this was a typo? IE6,7, and even 8 (so far) is littered with so many bugs and unsupported CSS elements that it's the of bane of every web developer. I should caveat that with every web developer that cares about standards and supporting browsers other than IE alone. If you search the Internet for "css bugs" or something of that ilk, you'll find almost every post directed at IE. If you look at any web template, ours included, you'll find extensive IE only css files, that are there to workaround IE incompatibilities and rendering problems. I've said this before, but in general we have to concern ourselves with IE's limitations and issues (i'm talking about 6 primarily but also 7) in every design we do. We do not have these problems with webkit, mozilla, and even opera based browsers. If IE was webkit-based for example, we would save weeks, probably months of work a year trying to find fixes for this shoddy product.
Anyway, the point is the only reason you have the impression that IE renders pages so well, is that due to it's market dominance, web designers are forced to support it. Most businesses focus on IE support because the vast majority of their users use it so they build their sites and applications in a non-standards (meaning ONLY supporting IE's broken engine) manner or use IE only technologies like active-x, and therefore unsupported in every other standards compliant browser, eg Firefox. Chrome has a long way to go before it can even take on Firefox, never-mind IE in the popularity, however, as long as it does it in standards complaint way, using the tried and true webkit engine, I'm not worried about it.
I hope that IE8 ends this terrible cycle of broken browsers from Microsoft, but after installing the latest Windows 7 with IE8, i'm not hopeful...