Bah, sorry for double post, but i hear you on the IE versions.
And so did someone else, so they created an Internet Explorer
Collection.
I personally haven't tested it yet, but it looks really interesting
from the pictures i have seen.
http://finalbuilds.edskes.net/iecollection.htm
As long as you have XP+ and no 64bit, you can run all versions.

There was some other browser i had that could load up the 3 engines in
one program too, but it was incredibly slow and buggy, sadly.

Apparently Microsoft are working on something related to this field
too.  Not sure if it was Trident-only, or other engines.

On May 8, 4:02 pm, Christopher James Calo <[email protected]>
wrote:
> I currently use virtual machines to do this, but wouldn't it be great
> if web devs didn't have to buy expensive VM software and waste so much
> time install OSes on them?  This is nearly impossible with IE and
> painful with FF's profiles.  Imagine the productivity gain for web
> devs across the globe if they could run every version of all major
> browsers.  I think the productivity gain could be on par with what
> happened when Firebug was released.  Chrome can blaze this trail.
>
> I love how eclipse needs no installer.  You just unzip it and run it.
> Why not have a similar option for web devs?
>
> Chris
>
> On May 8, 7:40 am, Matthew Lecin <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > On Thu, May 7, 2009 at 17:57, Charles L. <[email protected]> wrote:
> > >How can I run several versions of Chrome side-by-side?
>
> > Sounds like a perfectly good reason for virtual machines, one for each
> > version of Chrome you want to run.  VMWare Server is still free.
>
> > Disclaimer: I don't work for VMWare, I just like it a lot.
>
> > {Mijjil}
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