It's relatively simple to make CSS-based layout work for IE6, IE7, and FF3,
which are my target browsers for design.  I make sure all my sites work well
on all three and it doesn't take much extra work at all.

I use conditional stylesheets for all browser-specific tweaks, so that once
a browser's use is pretty much over, all I have to do is delete the stylesheet
rather than change a bunch of tweaked code.

Rick

> -----Original Message-----
> From: jquery-en@googlegroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Sam 
> Collett
> Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2008 6:58 AM
> To: jQuery (English)
> Subject: [jQuery] Re: New jQuery Website...
> 
> 
> As much as we don't like it, sites still have to be designed to cater
> for IE 6+
> 
> We are still on IE 6 at work, because some of the systems we use (not
> ones I have worked on of course!) only seem to work in IE 6. You would
> have thought when you pay for a system, it is updated as new browsers
> come out... should be in the Service Level Agreement.
> 
> I'm sure there are still a lot of corporate intranet's still depending
> on IE 6 (developers not caring about standards or really understanding
> web development outside the GUI used...)
> 
> -Sam
> 
> PS While IE7 may have some annoyances (Firefox does too), it is still
> much better (standards wise) than IE6
> 
> jeremyBass wrote:
> > I don't know if this is just me but the site is all kinds of broken...
> > I'mean in almost everywere... this is 2 IE7's and 1 IE6's on 3 pcs...
> > I'd give a url but ... well it's almost everywhere... cool idea
> > though...
> >


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