If your page follows the published standards and the browser doesn't,
it isn't your page that fails to work as it should.

-Adam

On Sat, Jul 26, 2008 at 1:58 AM, Anthony Farr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Godfrey wrote
> "It sounds like in your ideal world, everything is reduced to a lowest
> common denominator: every web site must run perfectly on the crappiest
> browser, therefore anything that browser cannot handle is forbidden."
>
> Nothing's mandated, nothing's forbidden.  If you or anyone want to
> create pages that fail in IE, then go ahead, just don't expect the
> majority of internet users to applaud you if your page doesn't work as
> it should.
>
> The internet is an open platform, it's attraction is that anyone can
> go anywhere and, whatever their OS and browser combination, should get
> the same experience.  If a subgroup wants to isolate themself into a
> software specific backwater, that's their choice.  Go at it.
>
> regards,
> Anthony Farr
>
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-- 
M. Adam Maas
http://www.mawz.ca
Explorations of the City Around Us.

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