Chris Ovenden wrote:
> I have to disagree. According to the BBC
> (http://www.bbc.co.uk/guidelines/newmedia/technical/browser_support.shtml),
> only 23% of their visitors have XP SP2 installed (ie only about a
> third of XP users). Even if we assume all those people accept the IE7
> upgrade (and it's likely most will), it will remain a minority browser
> for many years, if not forever. (I am skeptical about Vista ever being
> widespread, which would be the main factor in further adoption, and
> still contingent upon an as-yet undetected slowdown in Firefox use.)

I have to agree with this. There was a silent consensus of panic where I 
work when I found that Microsoft were about to make IE7 a 'recommended 
download'... Luckily IE7 is very well behaved over-all and I only had to 
spend a couple of ours updating all our websites for it.

However, the assertion that Microsoft's announcement meant that everyone 
will soon be using IE7 was not a reasonable one. As well as the factors 
Chris points to, we have to consider the notion of people looking to 
Vista PCs as alternatives to Macs - which in the popular eye are the new PC.
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