Net who?


My $0.02 ;-)


-Novak

-----Original Message-----
From: Irvin Gomez [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, December 17, 2003 2:29 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Re:text editor for content manag. systems

Rick:

How and where do you draw the line? I mean, how far back do you go in
suporting old browsers and how do you know when to stop? What's the
criteria?

I think this is a legitimate question that every developer faces at one
time or another. I'm interested in hearing other people's opinions.

irv

>Dan Farmer wrote:
>> But you never will be able to support 100% of your visitors, no
matter you
>> do or how many hours wasted trying to do it. Can't justify the costs
in
>> that.
>
>It doesn't cost me a penny more to support them.  I simply avoid using
>things that only work in IE.
>
>In my freelancing business, I have clients who use Macs and don't use
>Internet Explorer.  It would cost me money NOT to support them via loss

>of income.  In my day job, a lot of the users of my web apps are Mac
>users.  Hell, the director of my department (my bosses boss) uses
>Mozilla on a PC as his primary browser.
>
>I've even got a DHTML menu on day job's web site for navigation.  I use

>a little tool called DHTML Menu Builder, and it even works on Netscape
>4.7x browsers.
>
>To each his own, I guess.  Ability and interest in programming for all
>browsers makes me more valuable in my current job, and it makes me more

>valuable to my current and potential future clients as a freelancer.
>
>
>
>
>
  _____
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