In other words, progressive enhancement! Designers and developers need to understand and come to terms that it's ok for some "features" to not show up in older browsers such as a "shadow effect" etc.
As long as the content is accessible or available to all browsers then I say it's a WIN! It doesn't matter if IE6 doesn't see the shadow and Firefox does etc. the content is the same and still accessible to ALL users! M Sent from my iPhone On Dec 8, 2011, at 9:43 AM, MiB <digital.disc...@gmail.com> wrote: > > 8 dec 201115.26 buyz lots: > >> Is it worth supporting IE6 still? >> http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_explorer.asp > > If your target group is likely to use very old machines, yes. What does it > matter how minor percentage of "all web users" doesn't use IE6 if some large > enough percentage of your target group still does? > > A better approach IMHO is to support IE only by giving it and other browsers > good markup and a simplified CSS look, rather than a full on design like for > more modern browsers. That's justifiable I think. > > /MiB > > > > > -- > -- > You received this because you are subscribed to the "Design the Web with CSS" > at Google groups. > To post: css-design@googlegroups.com > To unsubscribe: css-design-unsubscr...@googlegroups.com -- -- You received this because you are subscribed to the "Design the Web with CSS" at Google groups. To post: css-design@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe: css-design-unsubscr...@googlegroups.com