:-) If you throw in the latest Opera and the latest Konqueror in the mix you covered 99.95% of the real world browser market. The rest is going to be Win95, lynx, and w3x.
 
Thanks,
 
Eugene
"David Ascher" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
On 12/10/05, hugo <gb-dSuQeq4P/[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Oh, and please keep in mind that there should be at least a sensible
fallback solution for those who don't want to (or plain and simple
can't) use _javascript_ all the time.

I want to read more about the concrete proposal before I dig deep into this thread, but I want to point out that while I agree that a non-JS fallback is a reasonable requirement for the Django Admin, I don't believe that a non-JS fallback is necessarily a requirement that needs to be imposed on an "AJAX" integration strategy.  In other words, for a lot of us, the admin interface is a nice to have, but the true business goals that the tools have to support may not include "work on non-JS browsers".  Personally, I'm quite interested in figuring out what the best stack is to build rich web apps, and I'm happy (for my market) to assume JS, IE6+, FF1+, Safari.

I worry that if fallback strategies are a strong requirement, then we can end this thread pretty quickly.

--david

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