@Matt
Hi Matt,
> Why is it accecptable to have to test in opera, safari and firefox and not in internet explorer?
I'm not sure what this is about - AFAICS nobody is saying anything about testing IE being bad, and testing other browsers being good. The point being made here, I believe, is that it appears the particular Microsoft test suite is being pushed as something that everybody should use, or the results will be useless in a wider context -
Quote :
"until we standardize how we all test standards compatibility, no one can tell what everyone has done," IE general manager Dean Hachamovitch told Mix 08 Wednesday.
- and that this stance may be counter-productive. More tests available are great but, as the author points out, other vendors do not appear to have problems testing against the standards anyway.
> Given that IE has the biggest market share, should we not get it working in IE and then worry about the others ?
No.
Firstly, using a effective monopoly in the desktop market to push things through that are convenient to yourself may be an easy option, but it is at the very least extremely irritating and, more often than not, acts as a barrier for anybody else to compete. Compelling from a business point of view ? Absolutely. Responsible and enabling innovation in the market ? Decidely not. I suggest you contact a few web developers and ask them what they think of Microsofts record in this regard and how it has effected their working life.
Secondly, from a developer point of view, for a complex problem like mark-up and layout, it is nearly always easier to write to standards than to re-invent it and patch it together as you go - it might not seem that way to begin with but, believe me, it's invariably true. I would have thought Microsofts internal developers would welcome the change, although some of the interim work may a little painful.
> Too many elitests here that will flame my comments but from a customer point of view (and my customers/colleagues come first) it would be great to have it working in firefox and IE from the offset but if there are issues i will go for IE everytime.
Well, it depends on who your customers are.(1) and it's also a little naive and rather selfish. If you write to follow the standards, and so does everybody else, everybody wins (there's a hint in the word 'standard' by the way) .. if not, you as a majority player may prevail due to your position, but your customers, the developers and everybody else loses out..
There is more than an iota of truth in 'might is right' - but that does not make it a very palettable, let alone good, idea... it certainly doesn't help the vast majority of the people you say you listen to.
One might even say it's a tad elitest.
Just a thought.