Interesting discussion. We are now working on a heavily CSS'd site and already finding some weirdness in IE6 behavior with our new dynamic menu.
I remember back when the incompatibilities were very bad already, and IE and Netscape kept thinking that adding new incompatible features would cause the other product to become extinct overnight...haha. What it really caused was 10,000 different browser detection routines and an unwillingness on the part of developers to go anywhere that might not be universally supported. Is there anything out there now that's a good comprehensive "where not to go with client side dev" overview, like we used to have? -- Kristina > John Campbell wrote: > > How do most people even do IE 6 testing? As far as I can tell, there > > is no legal means to test IE6 on a mac or linux. > > Under windows I've had good luck with MultipleIEs [1], for Linux there > is IEs4 Linux [2]. > > The easiest route is probably to keep a Windows machine around running > IE7, IE6 (via MultipleIEs), Firefox, Safari and Opera. You'll still run > into issues that only raise their heads in older versions, but you'll > have the major bases covered. > > Dan > > [1] http://tredosoft.com/Multiple_IE > [2] http://www.tatanka.com.br/ies4linux/page/Main_Page > _______________________________________________ > New York PHP Community Talk Mailing List > http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > > NYPHPCon 2006 Presentations Online > http://www.nyphpcon.com > > Show Your Participation in New York PHP > http://www.nyphp.org/show_participation.php > > _______________________________________________ New York PHP Community Talk Mailing List http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk NYPHPCon 2006 Presentations Online http://www.nyphpcon.com Show Your Participation in New York PHP http://www.nyphp.org/show_participation.php
