You mean they haven't broken their code to work with IE6's non-standards 
compliance HTML rendering.


The answer is, you can pay someone to rewrite the code, it is open source.  If 
it is that important to you I would give that a go.


Bret.

On Tuesday 07 August 2007 8:38:46 am RVO wrote:
> This is a tough deal, but I want to make this clear to those that help.....
>
> IE6
>
> *NO* other choice, period.  I'm stuck with it, solely and exclusively.
>
> I wish I could change that, but I absolutely cannot.  Not allowed.
>
> I find it very odd that a renowned software company has broken their
> software on a browser that still remains very widely supported, and in many
> cases, even mandated.
>
> Surely there is an answer (not an alternative).
>
>
>
>
> -------------------- m2f --------------------
>
> Read this topic online here:
> http://community.zenoss.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=9590#9590
>
> -------------------- m2f --------------------
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> zenoss-users mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.zenoss.org/mailman/listinfo/zenoss-users



-- 
Bret Baptist
Senior Network Administrator
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Internet Exposure, Inc.
http://www.iexposure.com
(612)676-1946 x17

Providing Internet Services since 1995
Web Development ~ Search Engine Marketing ~ Web Analytics
Network Security ~ On Demand Tech Support ~ E-Mail Marketing
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