>
> We shall see. Hey...at least this will stop all of you crybabies from
> whining about how crappy IE6 is. What's next on your complaints list?
>

My sentiments exactly!  But people will always complain about every IE does;
personally I think those that complain are just lazy and don't feel like
reading the many, many sites out there the will show you have to work with
the issue with out resorting to crazy hacks.  Just my two cents.

On 1/24/08, Andy Matthews <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> The article I read mentioned that MS is going to force IE7 on users, but
> that there was a way that sysadmins could prevent this. Whether that means
> that lots of people are going to try and prevent it is another story. The
> problem is that as long as there is even a 5% or 10% level of use of IE6,
> developers at least will need to keep it around.
>
> I personally have put off installing it IE7 at home so that I can still
> test
> with IE6.
>
> We shall see. Hey...at least this will stop all of you crybabies from
> whining about how crappy IE6 is. What's next on your complaints list?
>
> ;)
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: jquery-en@googlegroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
> Behalf Of cfdvlpr
> Sent: Wednesday, January 23, 2008 6:10 PM
> To: jQuery (English)
> Subject: [jQuery] Feb 12 IE6 Forced Update
>
>
> Does anyone know about how many IE6 users this will affect?  After Feb 12,
> 2008 is it likely that your IE 6 users will drop much?  If you have an
> ecommerce site that currently has about 40% IE6 users, is this percentage
> likely to go much farther down?  Or, is this update not forced on the
> average IE 6 user?  I'd just love to see IE6 go away, but I don't want to
> get my hopes up if this so-called forced update is not really forced on
> many
> of our IE6 users.
>
>
>


-- 
Benjamin Sterling
http://www.KenzoMedia.com
http://www.KenzoHosting.com
http://www.benjaminsterling.com

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