Recommended Posts

Are you a web developer?  I am.  I have a lot more trouble making web pages look good in Safari and Opera then I have making them look good in IE and Gecko.

I have a Javascript dropdown thing on Bink.nu, and it totally fails under Safari.  So what did I do?  Instead of wasting days figuring out a way to make it work all over, I pop up a box saying the pulldown is not compatible with Safari. 

Safari and Opera are an order of magnitude harder to work with compared to IE and Gekco based browsers.  I admire your idealism, but in practice your ideals are totally off.

586119375[/snapback]

Yeah, I don't even really bother with testing EVERY browser with websites I make. I test IE and Firefox, because they are the main two that are most used (Well, I can't test Safari because I don't have a mac ;)). Past that, I don't have time to check with Opera because I don't have time to follow up and fix issues with browsers that don't work properly, and are used so little.

The bottom line is, I follow specification guidelines. My websites are written in Strict XHML, it's up to browsers to support that, and IE and Firefox rarely have problems if you do it that way. If I want to add something out of spec, then I would test with more browsers, because I'm using potentially unsupported code that is my responsibility to make sure works.

Yeah, I don't even really bother with testing EVERY browser with websites I make. I test IE and Firefox, because they are the main two that are most used (Well, I can't test Safari because I don't have a mac ;)). Past that, I don't bother with Opera because I don't have time to follow up and fix issues with browsers that don't work as they should.

The bottom line is, I follow specification guidelines. My websites are written in Strict XHML, it's up to browsers to support that, and IE and Firefox rarely have problems if you do it that way.

586119386[/snapback]

uh....no, opera has its own engine...

Are you a web developer?  I am.  I have a lot more trouble making web pages look good in Safari and Opera then I have making them look good in IE and Gecko.

586119375[/snapback]

Well, if you're Ryan Hoffman and responsible for http://www.extended64.com/ (as written in your profile) you also seem to have some issues making websites look good in Internet Explorer and Gecko!

This site is best viewed with a 1024x768 or higher screen resolution

Well, even with a maximzed browser window, without any sidepanels and on the recommended resolution of 1024x768 you cannot read the website without scrolling vertically and horizontally! That can hardly be an intended user experience and is absolutely unnecessary.

And there is just so much wrong with the javascript on bink.nu that I don't know where to start. There is nothing on bink.nu that cannot be done with standard compliant DOM 2.0 / JS 1.5 which works fine on most current browsers including IE 5+ and Safari / KHTML. You're using so much MS specific JS that it's just sad. That's also why the JS-skript is bloated with code for specific user agents instead of just using code that doesn't require any check's like that (if you ignore IE 4.x or netscape 4.x, which you're doing anyways and which is quite save to do).

The *number* of security issues, by itself, means little, of course. (Unless it is zero.)

"The report shows the Firefox browser was only exposed to a publicly known vulnerability without a patch for 65 days in 2004; IE, on the other hand, was safe for only seven days last year."

586118642[/snapback]

Firefox 1.0 was released on November 9 of 2004, all builds before that were betas. (Preview Builds)

:)

Really? Any reason for you thinking its pathetic?

586121559[/snapback]

It's these one-word replies that are pathetic, actually. :)

I don't know how many people actually took the time to watch the C9 video before posting, but it seems like many of you are missing the point of the Gnomedex announcement by a mile.

This isn't about MSFT playing catch-up. Sure, RSS support has existed for a while in Opera, Firefox and Safari. IE7's implementation looks quite a bit like Safari's. Agreed there too. Why reinvent the wheel when there's already a great implementation available. Besides, there are only so many ways you can present an RSS feed to a user in a coherent manner. In any case, what's really significant about the announcement is the platform model for RSS that's being built into the OS. That's the really cool stuff; that's the stuff that hasn't been done before - the concept of a single data store for all your subscribed feeds that's tied to your user profile, and that's freely accessible through a set of available API's by any third-party application that wants to be RSS-enabled.

The Gnomedex keynote presentation and the C9 video highlighted some of the scenarios that are made possible by this framework. So you're surfing the web and you subscribe to a bunch of feeds that contain a variety of enclosures, including photos, music/podcasts, a list of events, etc. Your subscription list becomes available to any RSS-enabled app installed on your system. So your screensaver could pull images dynamically from a photoblog's feed; your media player could pull media files embedded into feeds to enable podcasting support; your PIM could pull events and meeting times from a feed and automatically add them to your calendar and todo lists. Due to the very nature of RSS, it would even reflect any changes that are made, so you're always in sync. And of course, your standalone news aggregator could pull regular text feeds from your favorite news sources and blogs. The beauty of this approach is that it's one single, common data store for all your feeds. It does away with redundancy, and since it's easily accessible via an available API, any third-party software can tie into it.

Then of course, there's the extension to the RSS standard for lists, which are similar, but work slightly differently from regular feeds. I won't go into that since there's plenty of information already available on the web from some authoritative sources, including Dave Winer, who was essentially responsible for the pioneering work in blogging, syndication, enclosures/podcasting, OPML and aggregators. The point is, even people like him are impressed with the work that Microsoft is doing here.

So a word of advise - before you jump and post something, stop, look around the web, watch the videos, listen to the podcasts, read the reactions of Gnomedex attendees, and get a clear picture of what's going on. You'll end up being much more informed and you won't have to resort to "pathetic" one-word posts. ;)

Edited by NetRyder
In any case, what's really significant about the announcement is the platform model for RSS that's being built into the OS. That's the really cool stuff; that's the stuff that hasn't been done before - the concept of a single data store for all your subscribed feeds that's tied to your user profile, and that's freely accessible  through a set of available API's by any third-party application that wants to be RSS-enabled.

and yes its all coming together in one hand under one name . its always the same story . i see a new threat on the horizon ....

and yes its all coming together in one hand under one name . its always the same story . i see a new threat on the horizon ....

586122069[/snapback]

As long as the APIs are publicly (Accuratly & Fully) documented it shouldn't be a problem. Anyone can access it....and it doesn't preclude you from keeping your own store, just makes it easy to share...

From what I've seen, Internet Explorer 7 will only be slightly better than Internet Explorer 6. I do mean "slightly." The overall progress that has been made with Internet Explorer 7 is depressing.

The rendering engine has had some show-stopping bugs fixed in it, but relative standards support will remain poor. Web designers currently have to devote a lot of time and effort to work around Internet Explorer's lack of standards-compliancy. The extra work usually results in sites being more expensive and longer to construct; more expensive and harder to maintain or redesign; and the overall user experience plummits because the resulting sites are bloated with extraneous (X)HTML, CSS, and JavaScript (or "JScript", as Microsoft calls it) and the extra bloat makes the sites much slower for end users and cost much more to keep online for visitors.

Speaking of standards support, I found it moderately funny earlier when someone said they had no problems writing valid XHTML for Internet Explorer. It is *impossible* to write valid XHTML because it requires the XHTML mimetype to be sent and that causes Internet Explorer to choke. When Internet Explorer chokes, it prompts the user to download the XHTML page instead of render it. If the page is working in Internet Explorer then that is because it is rendered as an HTML 4 document in quirks mode.

I wish the Internet Explorer team would stop working on extending RSS support to do things it wasn't meant to do. All of the things they are touting that will be possible with the enhanced RSS support is already available to us, they are simply wasting their time. Bundling RSS support into the operating system is a good idea, but the effort they are putting into making it a publicly-usable API is pointless; it's not exactly hard for a programmer to find a powerful XML parser if they actually intended to use RSS (plus, if an exploit occurs to the RSS API then it would effect almost everything, whereas individual solutions wouldn't be as vulnerable.) The majority of people that will be creating RSS feeds are web designers and RSS is always a smaller priority than getting the site working (so they should fix their standards-compliancy issues first.) Don't get me wrong, I love RSS - what I don't love is extraneous effort being put in to create a universal API for an XML parser that totally defies the RSS standard and claims that it is an RSS API (oops, another standards-compliancy problem we'll undoubtedly have problems with for the next decade.)

I'm not impressed with the security of Internet Explorer either. They keep touting the least-privilege user access system and protected administrator system as features of Internet Explorer 7. Those aren't Internet Explorer features, they're Longhorn features. All of the applications running under Longhorn will have this extra layer of protection. They keep touting their efforts to prevent phishing attacks, what are they? Perhaps you could start by fixing all of the spoofing issues in the interface: the status bar can be spoofed, the title bar can be spoofed, the whole document can be spoofed, dialogs can be spoofed, the "save picture as" dialog can be spoofed, I'll just say that everything can be spoofed just to keep things simple. All of the "security enhancements" I've heard about Internet Explorer is hype, nothing of substance.

As far as I can see, this is just Internet Explorer 6 with a few fixes and unneeded additions. That's just my opinion, anyways.

hmmmm i don't think so "Super duper ultracat",and obviously the IE7 looks better

586115922[/snapback]

LMAO. IE7 looks so similar to the Mac browser. :laugh: Microsoft suck.

would people please stop with the "this is similar to firefox" thing its getting really tiresome now. i can understand reasons for choices of browser but that isnt a reason to choose one over another. it seems to me it is just people complaining that ie might gain some ground back on firefox and you shouldnt care about that (unless you are a fanboy) i use ie because it loads fastest on my machine and renders all pages correctly and i now none of this is microsofts doing but neither is firefox being more secure. it is only more secure because less people are using it and it might have 500% less insecure time (even though this figure is wrong because that includes beta time) than ie but ie has about 9 times the number of users than firefox has so it makes sense.

i am looking forward to having rss support in ie though it will be great :)

I don't want to start a flamewar really, but appearance-wise I don't see anything special about it.

586123238[/snapback]

There is nothing wrong with current IE's appearance and it has a really nice UI. What they need to fix is the IE engine and hence it won't show on the surface :shifty:

For those complaining that MS needs to get IE right first and forget RSS platform API etc etc...keep in mind that apparently from c9 video, RSS team is different from IE team. :rolleyes:

For those complaining that MS needs to get IE right first and forget RSS platform API etc etc...keep in mind that apparently from c9 video, RSS team is different from IE team.

I know they're a different team, they need to merge the RSS and IE developers into a single IE-team so the most important web-based application isn't another peice of crap.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Weekend PC Game Deals: Anno 117, Final Fantasy VII, Rematch, and more by Pulasthi Ariyasinghe Weekend PC Game Deals is where the hottest gaming deals from all over the internet are gathered into one place every week for your consumption. So kick back, relax, and hold on to your wallets. The Epic Games Store's mystery giveaways may have ended, but its regular freebies didn't miss a step this week. The double drop was for copies of Warhammer 40K Speed Freeks and The Ouroboros King. Speed Freeks lands for multiplayer racing fans, but with plenty of competitive shooting elements too. You will be piloting Ork buggies, tanks, and aircraft modeled after the popular tabletop miniatures while trying to complete objectives and pass finish lines. Next, Ouroboros King is a crossover between chess and tactical roguelikes, offering the chance to create your own army with special rules to beat incoming foes on the board. The double giveaway on the Epic Games Store will be available until June 11, and replacing it will be Citizen Sleeper and ROBOBEAT. The Humble Store brought a new charity bundle to check out this week too. Landing with the name The Complete Inkle Library, this is a large collection of interactive narrative puzzle games from the publisher Inkle. This begins with Heaven's Vault, four parts from the Sorcery series, 80 Days, Overboard, and Pendragon: Narrative Tactics within the starting tier for $9. Hopping up a step to the $12 tier gets you TR-49, Expelled, and A Highland Song for paying at least $12. If you go for the $20 tier, you get four e-books from the Heaven's Vault series. The bundle has almost three weeks on its counter before it goes away. Big Deals There is a larger than normal amount of weekend specials happening this time, including multiple publisher deals, franchise discounts, and indie gems to grab. With those and more, here's our hand-picked big deals list for the weekend: Anno 117: Pax Romana – $44.99 on Steam Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 – $39.99 on Steam Timberborn – $27.99 on Steam EARTH DEFENSE FORCE 6 – $26.39 on Steam Rust – $19.99 on Steam FINAL FANTASY VII REBIRTH – $19.99 on Steam Street Fighter 6 – $19.99 on Steam Returnal – $19.79 on Steam Shape of Dreams – $17.49 on Steam Far Cry 6 – $14.99 on Steam Assassin's Creed Valhalla – $14.99 on Steam Quarantine Zone: The Last Check – $14.99 on Steam REMATCH – $14.99 on Steam EA SPORTS FC 26 – $13.99 on Steam FINAL FANTASY VII REMAKE INTERGRADE – $13.99 on Steam Magicraft – $12.79 on Steam Cult of the Lamb – $12.49 on Steam Dying Light 2: Reloaded Edition – $11.99 on Steam Cuphead – $11.99 on Steam Assassin's Creed Odyssey – $11.99 on Steam Hunt: Showdown 1896 – $11.99 on Steam Sektori – $11.99 on Steam Just Shapes & Beats – $11.99 on Steam Gunfire Reborn – $10.99 on Steam 33 Immortals – $9.99 on Epic Store Baby Steps – $9.99 on Steam Sifu – $9.99 on Steam Hearts of Iron IV – $9.99 on Steam DREDGE – $9.99 on Steam DAVE THE DIVER – $9.99 on Steam Pacific Drive – $9.89 on Steam Mycopunk – $9.74 on Steam Sons Of The Forest – $8.99 on Steam Jotunnslayer: Hordes of Hel – $8.99 on Steam Nuclear Throne – $8.99 on Steam Mechabellum – $8.99 on Steam Deep Rock Galactic: Survivor – $8.44 on Steam TerraTech Legion – $7.99 on Steam Inscryption – $7.99 on Steam Assassin's Creed Unity – $7.49 on Steam Minishoot' Adventures – $7.49 on Steam The Stanley Parable – $7.49 on Steam Oxygen Not Included – $7.49 on Steam Megabonk – $6.99 on Steam Look Outside – $5.99 on Steam Vampire Hunters – $5.24 on Steam MOTHERGUNSHIP – $4.99 on Steam My Friend Pedro – $3.99 on Steam The Messenger – $3.99 on Steam Vampire Survivors – $3.74 on Steam Brotato – $2.99 on Steam Enter the Gungeon – $2.99 on Steam Loop Hero – $2.99 on Steam GRIS – $2.99 on Steam Exit the Gungeon – $2.49 on Steam Hitman: Absolution – $1.99 on Steam CARRION – $1.99 on Steam Don't Starve Together – $1.49 on Steam Golf With Your Friends – $1.49 on Steam Hotline Miami – $0.99 on Steam The Ouroboros King – $0 on Epic Store Warhammer 40K Speed Freeks – $0 on Epic Store DRM-free Specials Hopping over to the DRM-free deals, the GOG store has plenty of discounts running this weekend too. Here are some highlights: Fallout 4: Game of the Year Edition - $15.99 on GOG Fallout: New Vegas Ultimate Edition - $9.99 on GOG Disco Elysium - The Final Cut - $9.99 on GOG Crysis - $9.99 on GOG Tyranny - Standard Edition - $7.49 on GOG Frostpunk: Game of the Year Edition - $7.35 on GOG Banished - $6.79 on GOG Fallout 3: Game of the Year Edition - $6.59 on GOG The Forgotten City - $6.25 on GOG The Age of Decadence - $5.99 on GOG SimCity 3000 Unlimited - $4.99 on GOG Assassin's Creed: Director's Cut - $4.99 on GOG SimCity 4 Deluxe Edition - $3.99 on GOG Vampyr - $3.99 on GOG Torchlight II - $3.99 on GOG Deus Ex GOTY Edition - $3.49 on GOG Primordia - $3.09 on GOG Theme Hospital - $2.99 on GOG SimCity 2000 Special Edition - $2.99 on GOG Total Annihilation: Kingdoms + Iron Plague - $2.99 on GOG Deus Ex: Human Revolution - Director’s Cut - $2.99 on GOG Master of Orion 1+2 - $2.39 on GOG Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time - $1.99 on GOG Prince of Persia: Warrior Within - $1.99 on GOG EVERSPACE - $1.99 on GOG Total Annihilation: Commander Pack - $0.99 on GOG Keep in mind that availability and pricing for some deals could vary depending on the region. That's it for our pick of this weekend's PC game deals, and hopefully, some of you have enough self-restraint not to keep adding to your ever-growing backlogs. As always, there are an enormous number of other deals ready and waiting all over the interwebs, as well as on services you may already subscribe to if you comb through them, so keep your eyes open for those, and have a great weekend.
    • When will the Photos app be updated to remember the window size and position when reopened? They addressed this issue in a 2024 version of the app (though I can't recall the build number). Unfortunately, after that specific version, the problem persists! Please prioritise this fix in your K2 schedule. Additionally, the Snipping Tool has lost the ability to capture the Windows Taskbar starting from the 2024 version!
    • Same, never saw it on Android or iOS. Guess only some people got it *shrugs*
    • Anthropic pulls Fable 5 and Mythos 5 after US export control order by Pradeep Viswanathan In April this year, Anthropic launched the Claude Mythos Preview frontier model with state-of-the-art cyber and coding capabilities for a select set of companies around the world. After preparing appropriate guardrails, early this week, Anthropic launched Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5, its most capable AI models. Claude Fable 5 is for general users and comes with strict safeguards, while Mythos 5 is designed with fewer safeguards for cybersecurity and biology use cases. Today, Anthropic abruptly suspended access to its Fable 5 and Mythos 5 AI models for all customers after receiving an export control directive from the US government. The company received the directive from the government today at 5:21 p.m. ET, and the received letter did not provide any details regarding the national security concern. Anthropic understands that the government became aware of a method to bypass, or “jailbreak,” Fable 5, which might be the reason behind the directive. The order was issued under national security authorities and requires the company to suspend all access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 by any foreign national, whether they are inside or outside the United States. The restriction also applies to foreign national employees working at Anthropic. As a result, the company has disabled both models for all customers to ensure compliance. Access to previous Anthropic models like Opus and Sonnet is not affected by this government order. The company highlighted that it had developed strong safeguards to reduce the possibility that Fable is misused for tasks related to cybersecurity. In fact, many developers are complaining that the safeguards are going overboard. Additionally, the company worked with the US government, the UK AISI, multiple private third-party organizations, and internal teams to red-team Fable’s safeguards for thousands of hours. Finally, Anthropic noted that no testers have yet been able to find a universal jailbreak on Fable 5. As expected, Anthropic disagrees that a narrow potential jailbreak should lead to the recall of a commercial model used by hundreds of millions of people. It warned that applying this standard across the AI industry could effectively halt new frontier model deployments. Anthropic concluded by mentioning that it is working to restore access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 as soon as possible and plans to share more details within the next 24 hours.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      ssd21345 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Contributor
      MarkHughes4096 went up a rank
      Contributor
    • Dedicated
      jordanspringer earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Rookie
      Rimplesnort went up a rank
      Rookie
    • One Year In
      Markus94287 earned a badge
      One Year In
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      503
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      176
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      147
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      92
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      79
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!