>> Thought you'd be interested in this. Could this *finally* be the end >> of IE6 and our CSS woes? > > Yes, in time IE6 will disappear - the sooner the better, but the > suggested 'options for "not supporting" ie6' are time-consuming and > don't provide quick relief for designers/developers. > > This is quick and painless... > <http://www.gunlaug.no/contents/wd_additions_50.html> > ...and can leave IE6 with no styles or with minimal styling in no time, > almost regardless of how one organizes ones site and CSS. > > I prefer the "minimal styles" route - as shown for my article, but will > probably follow the "no change" route site-wide and for client work > until IE7 disappears too. > IE7 for the most part falls into the same "bug-category" as IE6, and is > in need of the same fixes as its predecessor(s), or variants thereof, > anyway - at least the way I work :-) > > More on the issue... > <http://thatnorwegianguy.com/norwegian-ie6-spring-cleaning/> > <http://www.stoplivinginthepast.com/news/steve-balmer-voices-support-for-the-norwegian-ie6-campaign/> > > Stay updated: <http://search.twitter.com/search?q=%23IE6> > > regards > Georg > -- > http://www.gunlaug.no
nice articles. working on css to deal with ie6 is really time consuming. not to mention the troubles of getting ie6 browser for testing. virgil http://www.jampmark.com ______________________________________________________________________ css-discuss [[email protected]] http://www.css-discuss.org/mailman/listinfo/css-d List wiki/FAQ -- http://css-discuss.incutio.com/ List policies -- http://css-discuss.org/policies.html Supported by evolt.org -- http://www.evolt.org/help_support_evolt/
