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Why You Should Dump Internet Explorer

The time has come to dump Internet Explorer. I know, I know - you may have heard the same thing before from those that think it’s cool to hate Microsoft; but I’m not one of those guys. I’m actually an MCSE and I happen to like quite a few of Microsoft’s products. Rather than lump me into the Microsoft-basher category, consider for a moment why you use the browser you use, and humor me by entertaining the notion - if even for a second - that switching to another might be worth your while.

My argument is simple: the benefits of using IE are too few - and the faults too great - to put off the adoption of an alternative any longer.

Security

Since information security is my hobby/job/obsession, this particular topic is near and dear to my heart. Just about everyone reading this has seen computers that have been beaten down with spyware - the evil junk that hijacks IE and renders a system virtually useless. How many times have you been called to a family member’s house to clean up their system? Or had to call your techie friend to come clean yours? It’s often quite awkward - the system slows to a crawl and every other mouse click conjures up some species of perverse, obscene image. What most people don’t realize, however, is that there is a very simple and powerful way to defend your system (and/or the systems of your loved ones) in one fell swoop.

Don’t use Internet Explorer.

What makes other browsers better than IE at protecting vs. spyware and other attacks? Well, it’s simple really - most other browsers don’t make it so easy to install malicious software on your system without you knowing about it. IE makes it relatively trivial through two features called ActiveX and Active Scripting. These technologies were designed specifically for the purpose of giving Web sites more control over a user’s computer. Unfortunately, as we have seen with exploit after exploit - that’s not always a good thing.

In addition to the spyware issues, IE in general has had a terrible track record when it comes to all types of serious security issues. For years now, it’s seemed like every time you turn around there is a new way to have your computer taken over via Internet Explorer. Put “internet explorer” and “allow an attacker to execute commands” (with the quotes) into Google and you’ll see what I mean.

In IE’s defense, many anti-Microsoft types will claim that it’s not possible to lock down IE at all. This is not true. It is possible - but if and only if you have a fair amount of technical know-how on the subject, and the time to do it. My personal view, however, is that tools such as Internet browsers should not require expertise and configuration time to be able to use them safely.

Standards

This is likely to get me in some hot water with my fellow security enthusiasts, but I find this issue to be of even more concern than that of IE’s security. The Internet works for one simple reason - everything at its core has been built on agreements that bind it together. Whether a computer is connected from California or Sri Lanka, it’s going to speak the same language and obey the same rules - the rules defined by standards. If this weren’t the case there would be no Internet at all. These agreements are forged by a body of people whose goal is nothing short of designing a better and more efficient Internet for everyone. Microsoft, for some odd reason, seems bent on breaking stride with these agreed-upon standards. Case in point: the next time you’re in a bookstore, head over to the technology section and pick up a book on XHTML or CSS. These are two major Web standards that deal with how Web pages are displayed to users, and within any book on the subjects you will find one common theme:

The absolute worst browser when it comes to supporting the standards is Internet Explorer.

Page after page in these books will reveal features supported in other browsers, but not in IE. Ask yourself why a company would choose not to support standards that benefit everyone? The way I see it, it’s for precisely one of two reasons - either they are unable to, or they don’t want to. Given the fact that they are a multi-billion dollar company (one of the richest on the planet), I can’t help but lean toward the second option. Without going into too much detail (See Longhorn), they have their own plans, and those plans involve implementing their own standard and forcing it upon the world. Call me a geek/hippie, but the idea of a multi-billion dollar corporation snubbing its nose at agreed-upon standards is nothing short of infuriating.

Options

Lucky for us, we have alternatives. The good news is that the alternative browsers are actually as good or better than IE. There are many out there, but in my opinion the Mozilla products are the best. I personally prefer and recommend Mozilla Firefox. Not only does it keep your browsing sessions a lot more secure and spyware-free, but it also supports the standards religiously and has a wide range of powerful features. Arguably the biggest benefit to using a Mozilla-based product is something called tabbed browsing. What this allows you to do is have multiple pages open within a single browser window. Rather than going from window to window in the taskbar, you can simply switch between clearly visible tabs, all within the same view. You can even do this and many other commands via the keyboard if you are into that sort of thing.

Using Firefox will not require any major shift in your daily browsing habits. It’ll import your favorites automatically, and you can benefit from the improved security starting the first time you open it. With the popup blocking enabled, you can breath quite a bit easier when browsing to unknown sites. Attempts to install garbage on your system that could have easily succeeded if you were using IE will simply be ignored by Firefox. Plus, the whole time you’re browsing you’ll know that you are doing your part to keep the soul of the Internet alive by choosing to use a browser whose developers actually care about standards.

Of course, I still use IE. (pause for effect) …it’s how I get my Windows security updates. : Seriously though - Windows Update is a must, and it only works in IE, so that in itself is a good reason to fire up IE once in a while. Aside from Windows Update though, there is still the occasional site that I go to that doesn’t look right in any other browser. Those sites, by the way, are all the more reason to not use IE. They weren’t written according to the standards, and they look bad in any browser other than IE as a result of that fact. Using IE all the time just because the occasional site is designed so poorly as to look like crap in other browsers is utterly bad form. I implore you not to give into this temptation.

Wrapping It Up

So, in closing, I leave you with two thoughts:

  1. Due to the combination of ActiveX, scripting, and its integration with the Windows operating system, Internet Explorer is more vulnerable to attack than many other browsers.
  2. The designers of Internet Explorer have purposely turned their back on the standards designed to benefit the Internet as a whole. They have done this for years, continue to do it today, and appear to have nothing but their own interests at heart.

I ask that you consider these points and pull down a copy of Firefox, Opera, or another alternative browser. Run it for a week and see how it feels. As mentioned above, I personally recommend Firefox due to its excellent development team and large user base. Once you have had some time to get to know your new onramp to the Web, I think you’ll find that you’ll wish you had switched sooner. No longer will you have to worry about garbage clogging up your system because of your browser, or having to make a mad rush for a patch every time an IE vulnerability is released.

Finally, and most importantly - spread the word. It’s time now for us to put alternative browsers on the map and let it be known that we are aware of our choices. We need not settle for what we are being fed when there are better, more secure alternatives out there.

If you have any questions, feel my position is flawed, or would just like to give some feedback, I can be reached at daniel@dmiessler.com.

[Daniel Miessler]

What are your thoughts?

Ralph Emerson - October 10, 2006 @ 9:39 pm

Good talk, didn’t see that one coming…

You’re asking us to go for what is better, and I am saying we do not care. IE hasn’t given me issues - so why fix something that is not broken?

Ralph.

Sjaak - October 16, 2006 @ 6:32 am

IE is the worst browser ever for any Web designer! It messes up your pages and you have to make it up all over again for IE. I say let’s boycott IE!

Crass Casualty » Blog Archive » My Stuff (hardware/software) - October 16, 2006 @ 11:46 am

[…] I don’t use Internet Explorer unless I have to. Why? http://www.lockergnome.com/nexus/news/2004/06/15/why-you-should-dump-internet-explorer/ […]

suchdevs - November 23, 2006 @ 11:35 am

I have been firefox for last year and a half now, and realize what all I was missing earlier…

Its true, IE is crap. NO REASON AT ALL to use IE, except for Windows Update.

As for the part of the world that does not see anything broken, come out and see the world!

reggie - December 3, 2006 @ 2:11 pm

great article. i’m going to use it in an argumentative paper for my english 111c course. I love firefox and have been using it for a while now.

Robert Gentile - December 8, 2006 @ 1:17 pm

As a web developer who uses Firefox but needs to check sites in IE too, I found the Firefox extension IE Tab very useful. It opens up IE in a Firefox tab.

https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/1419/

You can also find a bunch of other Firefox extensions that make web development a lot easier at: http://lesliefranke.com/files/firefoxwdev/firefoxwdev.htm

ht - December 11, 2006 @ 1:05 pm

i use both opera and firefox… firefox is definetely more user friendlly and definetely a good browser but opera is a powerhouse… very smooth, very fast.

Mr. Talâs (Real deal) - December 15, 2006 @ 11:50 am

Nicely wrapped up, could refer newbs to this site. Sadly when not using IE you get a little ‘out of touch’ with Microsoft.com and theire updates. Not that i’ve ever noticed any update thats worth the bandwidt or my time.

I would however like to try IE 7, but it never reaches my computer before i get some installation error, without any possible hint of why it crashes.
(that one is for those saying IE is so very compatible)

Im using Firefox, which is quite incompareable with IE, because of all the extensions availible. Open-source and plugin based browsers will always rule over the hardcoded ones.

Amen.

G LU - December 23, 2006 @ 5:48 am

I was 14, I thought I can only browse internet by IE. once I realised that IE is just on of the web clients. I swtich to the other alternatives immediately.
Firefox. Web client platform should be opensourced as everyone needs to use it. I personally support IE. As a web developer, I found IE is not very friendly at all. It freezes my machine.

James - January 4, 2007 @ 11:28 am

For all of you saying that IE is needed for updating windows, try http://www.WindizUpdate.com . It’s a version of Windows Update that works with Firefox. I would try it, but hey, i’m a happy linux user. Now there’s a different article ;)

Megatron - January 6, 2007 @ 7:40 pm

I know perfectly what you mean…

I own/maintain a series of servers/workstations/customer PCs, and the ones that give me most of the problems are those that just can’t let IE go.

Someone mentioned IE7.. and yes.. it’s a lot better, then IE6.. but I don’t think that it brings more security(I must confess I was lazy to dig more info about it).. but I have my doubts.

Currently I use Firefox or Opera.. it depends(on the mood). ;)

ImDaFrEaK - January 7, 2007 @ 2:38 pm

This guy is a phony. He’s not a MSCE.

ImDaFrEaK - January 7, 2007 @ 2:39 pm

And IE7 is far better than any other browser i’ve used.

SLV Dweller - January 30, 2007 @ 8:25 am

It took Microsoft about five years to upgrade Internet Explorer from version 6 to version 7. In that long span of time, they couldn’t implement support for an important web standard: XHTML.

XHTML is the future of the web, and the most important part of it is the MIME type used to serve it. Although most web sites are served with the MIME type of text/html, the latest version of XHTML (version 1.1) needs to be served with a MIME type of application/xhtml+xml.

Internet Explorer doesn’t understand this important MIME type, but every other browser does. Safari, Firefox, Opera, and Konqueror are all standards compliant. Internet Explorer is not standards compliant.

I’m in the process of moving my web site to XHTML 1.1 served as application/xhtml+xml, and I can’t wait another 2-5 years for Microsoft to put this into IE8.

So I’m giving my readers fair warning and giving them a mechanism to install Firefox. They’ll be so much better off if they switch.

Brink - February 14, 2007 @ 6:04 pm

mwha firefox is very bad.

Im using version 2.0.0.1
It has problems with showing nested tables. Sometimes it doesnt show the page correct and when you minimize and maximize the window it shows the page correct again.
Another problem is that it doesnt respect ‘no cache’ headers. When a page was viewed that has ‘no cache’ headers you can use the history back button to view the old page with wrong data.
Internet explorer rescpect ‘no cache’ headers as mentioned in HTTP 1.1.

Take a look here and see how many unhandeld bugs mozilla/firefox has…

https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/buglist.cgi?quicksearch=all

Stingerblue - February 21, 2007 @ 7:16 pm

*cough* wtf are you on about Brink, the link that you posted, shows all bugs, that were posted, during the development ffs, from start, to present, an developer version of ff 3.0 (Gran Paradiso) was released late last year, which is based on gecko 1.9, which might give you some idea, of the scale of development (ff 0.x to 3).

Susheel - March 30, 2007 @ 1:19 am

Hi there…

Great post. You’ve been linked to on my blog… http://phototip.blogspot.com/2007/03/why-im-asking-you-to-use-firefox-on.html

Cheers!

Susheel

aljohnson.co.uk » An Apology Of Sorts To IE Users - April 1, 2007 @ 3:38 am

[…] Now I know that might raise a few hackles, even amongst those of the geek persuasion (who should know better), and yes I know it comes bundled with Windows and you PC users are probably really used to it, but there’s no getting around the fact that it’s poorly designed, renders web sites incorrectly, and is shot through with security holes like a collander which compromise the safety of your data and leave your machine wide open to malicious hijack. […]

Dan’s World » Blog Archive » Anti-Windows Rant #1 - April 3, 2007 @ 7:53 pm

[…] The lesson learned here is not how crappy Windows or Microsoft is, but moreso that I’ve wasted so many hours of my life dealing with these types of problems, so many precious hours of my life have been spent dealing with issues that shouldnt need to be dealt with. From now on I will go out of my way to aviod dealing with any Microsoft products, be it a mouse, and O/S or really-crappy-defective-non-standard-insecure browser […]

Mark - April 7, 2007 @ 11:03 am

I just want to know why, when I install MozillaFirefox, upon opening Firefox it’s main page is windows Internet Explorer. It doesn’t allow viewing properties. And I can’t seem to get rid of the IE home page no matter what I do, even re-installing MozillaFirefox. Please help me out. Email me if you would. I can’t seem to find an answer on this one. Take care, Mark

Chuck - April 8, 2007 @ 7:18 pm

Mark: go to Tools/Internet Options. Make sure you’re in the “Main” tab. You will see a text box labeled “Home Page.” Just change the address in there to whatever you want it to be.

Trollicus - April 19, 2007 @ 8:19 am

Read the “Halloween letters” from Microsoft and you will understand why IE is the way it is. MS want to lock you in to Proprietary standards to stop you from using something else. This is an old strategy in the computer industry (IBM VS DEC etc.). Also FUD (Fear Uncertainty and Doubt) another IBM strategy that MS has taken to a whole new level. The more I learn about Active X scripts the more I realize that it’s imposable to secure. (Java script isn’t much better, it’s just really hard to secure)

w00t - April 25, 2007 @ 10:12 am

yea go Mozilla!

Tom - May 3, 2007 @ 2:57 pm

Microsoft is doing a noble thing. Due to bugs in internet explorer, people who write clean DOM based code are forced to make workarounds. That takes time and effort. That means more charges at hourly rate. That means more income from unexpected sources. It is also the reason that so many security firms earn their business. If it were a perfect DOM compliant browser, what would these guys do? And would there ever be competing browsers? Would there ever be so many web-journalists making money out of stories like - zero day flaw in Internet Explorer discovered - every week, week after week for the past 8-10 years? What would they do? What about all the ad companies who make their money from Internet Explorer bugs? Security issues are few compared to this huge security industry being sustained by Internet Explorer and Microsoft’s policies. They provide employment to everyone. Now with Vista, even hardware experts get great business. Device and driver manufacturers get more business. A whole lot of people’s daily bread is earned by those bugs in Internet Explorer. They run an industry. They rock!

Zak - May 25, 2007 @ 3:17 pm

great article..

IE is the slowest browser .. and i left it since 2 years .. i am using opera now and its faster and better than IE …but i dont about the opera from the desingr view..

Thanks alot dude

IE7 Hater - May 31, 2007 @ 7:43 am

IE7 is the WORST BROWSER EVER!!!!!!!!

IE7 has so many prompts and questions, why can’t it just work?

WHAT THE HELL ARE THOSE MICROSOFT FOLKS IN REDMOND DOING?

5+ YEARS OF DEVELOPMENT TO ROLL-OUT CRAP????

BILL NEEDS TO COMEBACK TO PULL THE REIGNS ON THESE KIDS…

CRAPPY ASS IE7 b*tchES!

IE7 Hater - May 31, 2007 @ 7:44 am

I CAN’T EVEN UPDATE MS OFFICE ON IE7?????

WHERE’S THE IRONY IN THAT?

Hansen - June 1, 2007 @ 8:22 am

I hate it - I really hate that corporation more and more.
Everyone who says IE not sucks is an amateur!
F**K microsoft - liberate the web!

«leftbraned - June 4, 2007 @ 1:48 pm

Internet Exploder…

Why?
Why??
Why would anyone still use Internet Exporer when a free, superior alternative is just one download away?

Mozilla Firefox is better. You should use it. Here’s why:

Firefox is more stable than IE
Firefox is faster than IE
Firefox ha…

Egonitron - June 28, 2007 @ 12:20 pm

A Note to Internet Explorer Users…

Please, PLEASE stop using Internet Explorer, if for no other reason but this: You won’t see all websites the way they were meant to be seen. Internet Explorer (from here on out refered to simply as “IE”) does not support many features…

Leland - July 2, 2007 @ 4:59 pm

Actually, Firefox doesn’t support the standards as much as one might expect. Example! http://www.webstandards.org/files/acid2/test.html is a test page created just to test browsers compatibilty.
According to Wikipedia, only Safari 2.0.3. (or later), Konqueror 3.5 (or later), and Opera 9 render it properly. However, check out the same page in IE for an even more horrid result, (Laughs at how bad IE is at transparency).

IE7 Sucks Like Shit!!!! - July 5, 2007 @ 4:01 pm

f*cking IE7 couldn’t even display a single page, f*cking stupid. I used to prefer Firefox but some of the part of the page couldn’t be display. That’s why I want to open f*cking IE to display because the f*cking page is coded in ASP. I think everything in microsoft Sucks like sh*t. Those that are behind microsoft are f*cking sh*t brains. microsoft can you just eat sh*t and die?

And some body save the world by eliminating microsoft, please save the world create something that’s overwrites microsoft, and write microsoft off once and for all.

Oyun - July 13, 2007 @ 1:22 pm

I CAN’T EVEN UPDATE MS OFFICE ON IE7?????

WHERE’S THE IRONY IN THAT?

thanks

Oyun - July 13, 2007 @ 1:24 pm

And IE7 is far better than any other browser i’ve used.
Thanks

THE GNR GROUP WEB-DESIGN BLOG » Blog Archive » INTERNET EXPLORER IS THE WORST BROWSER! - July 22, 2007 @ 10:15 pm

[…] Ten Reasons Why Internet Explorer Sucks Why Microsoft’s Internet Explorer sucks! Why you should dump Internet Explorer […]

surfs up - July 23, 2007 @ 1:44 am

Look at it as Cars, they all have there differences, sometimes its nice to have a big one other times you wish it was smaller. With the proper settings IE isnt much (un)safer from FireFox or Opera. ( IE is the most interesting browser to write exploits for since it is still the leading browser on the net ). I use all 3, surfs up!

Glen - July 24, 2007 @ 12:42 pm

Saying that I dislike Internet Explorer is a huge understatement. All of your arguments are right on the money. Any one reading your article that still think Internet Explorer is not so bad check out my article “Internet Explorer is the worst browser” on my blog www.thegnrgroup.com/blog/?p=63

IEIEIE - August 7, 2007 @ 8:41 am

Yeah, IE sucks, every attempt at dom based scripting always leads to headaches with IE. CSS scripting is a pain. The market is all IE, so as a web developer, you have to support the damn thing.

I couldnt tell you how many hours ive spent trying to develop something around IE. First, dev it in FireFox (1 hour), then, get it working in IE (2+ hours). Its crazy, i couldnt really care about the security of the thing, leave that to MS to mess things up.

Solution, if you cant get rid of IE because stupid people still use it (and ultimately end up paying more on dev time). then you need a work around. A abstracted layer for dom scripting would be nice. As for the CSS and rendering problems, abstract that away with additional script. Web sites get slower, everyone suffers, angry people throw bricks at MS. Revolution !

Steven - September 1, 2007 @ 12:23 pm

I have Windows Vista (gasp! the horror!) and like it for one big reason. Windows update is done through control panel. This means that I never have to use IE. Ever! GO FIREFOX!!

An-Outbreak - September 1, 2007 @ 2:52 pm

IE 7 is just another lameass browser product that is layin’ around in a while. i had been usin’ IE since Bill told me so , lil’ did i learn bout the other alternatives. IE was devastatin”’ frequently crashin’ my system..took years to open up a blank page and surprisingly froze my screen until i had to heat it up and put it on-a-thaw. folks out there !! its time for a change …its worth tryin’ other navigators and i bet you would never wanna switch back to IE ever again…word up…

Nikz-x3 - September 7, 2007 @ 10:15 pm

I hate IE, but have to use it as firefox wont download on my computer, I’m using a new computer `bout 1 year old and Win Xp, It use to download to the comp before it got rebooted….anyone know a way I could get it?

Jelly - October 7, 2007 @ 8:47 am

http:\\www.firefoxmyths.com
You guys may think that IE is bad. But it is infact better than firefox. I’m not saying it’s the best, but I’m saying it’s better than firefox. The correct order is Opera>IE>FireFox.

Efficient conditional comments » Eric Puidokas » Programming and Designing for the Web - October 8, 2007 @ 7:01 am

[…] What’s the number one complaint you hear from front-end developers? “Let’s admit it, we all hate Internet Explorer 6.” “The absolute worst browser when it comes to supporting the standards is Internet Explorer.” “…IE sucks ass.” Not surprisingly, those are all actual quotes. […]

ron - October 10, 2007 @ 1:40 pm

I like FF the best. MUCH, MUCH, faster than IE7. Takes a day and a half to load. By then, it’s old news. Get a lot of error pages on it. IE7 IS JUNK. If you want a good one, go with FF. Can’t beat it…

Mike Guenther - October 11, 2007 @ 11:05 am

Great Article.

I have been an avid Firefox user for 3+ years now. I have even just recently written an article on this very topic on my website.

AnishK - October 18, 2007 @ 6:14 pm

IE should be banned, as well as those who use it! Okay, Mozilla can’t view some pages perfectly, but that’s a small price to pay when your computer is filled with viruses you weren’t aware of!!!

Hudin - November 8, 2007 @ 11:32 am

I find it sad that even though this article was written in 2004 that something like half the internet users out there still use IE6. I’ve gotten tired of it and started up End 6!

- Hudin

Jack - November 23, 2007 @ 11:20 pm

Firefox SUCKS. Firefox is not all that it’s made out to be. Check this out: http://mywebpages.comcast.net/SupportCD/FirefoxMyths.html

Jonny the developer - November 30, 2007 @ 2:45 pm

I hate you Microsoft. You made a job that could have been fun (web design) into a hair pulling, face humping nightmare.

Internet explorer is the worst piece of software in the history of computers.

Reggie W - December 5, 2007 @ 5:07 pm

IE (any version) has go to be one of the worst pieces of garbage ever to become hugely popular. Inept at almost all of the jobs it’s supposed to perform, it’s popularity comes mostly from Microsoft forcing it down people’s throat and making it appear as if there is no alternative. Try completely removing IE from a windows system and you’ll see what I mean. YOU FREAKIN CANT! These people have designed a product with almost ZERO concern for the user. Its all about ensuring that you keep using Microsoft until you die, no matter how crappy it is and how many alternatives there are.

Runners-up in this category of garbage software are AOL, and RealPlayer.

Gene - December 13, 2007 @ 1:34 pm

I just got tired of all the crap that happen to ie, having to try to fix a problem with it all the time or take it to get it fix and they fix one thing and something else would be messed up in it, When you got it back.
Scraped it and went to Firefox, No more problems.

cadje - December 17, 2007 @ 1:57 pm

IE 7 is tha crap in perfection
guilltoine bug(11 variations).floating bug,3pixel bug and so an on
and now that best bug ever when you have an pseudo class object
:hover(btw one of the most important features of css) with an background-image, the f**** ie reload everytime the image. what a f+++!!!
feature of css is to decrease the http requests not to increase them.
anybody should tell this them,these m*****f****rs in redmond
if the couldn’t buy the sourcecode the have no good one.
ie6 –> ie7–> same bugs

Jonathon - January 2, 2008 @ 3:17 am

Nicely put Daniel!!

I have been doing web-design for over 10 years now, and I have found so many issues with IE that it’s unbelievable!!

It is true that you will find an issue with something on at least one browser, due to how differently they are configured… however, IE seems to take the gold medal in doing things wrong…

IE7 being one of the worst culprits around, bringing in all the new features, trying to be as good as other browsers (i.e. Mozilla Firefox) however completely failing at most things… Firefox benefits from “updates” from Mozilla, anytime something needs fixing or anything, and it does the job 1st time… working in the background to make sure that you are protected to the max!

However, with Firefox providing you with newer packages with fixes… IE seem to be releasing new packages (or patches) which don’t really solve the problem… and if they DO solve it, it simply creates a brand new problem… so… where’s the benefit in that? They seem to be going backwards rather than forwards with the times!!

Not to mention the anti-phishing filters and all other security features that are built into FireFox…

My recommendation… would be to switch to FireFox… only use IE when you absolutely must!! The way it stands at the moment, the more you DO use IE, the more you put yourself at risk!

Enoch Branard - February 7, 2008 @ 9:38 am

I commpleatly agree with this…I’m hopping that there wont be any more IE in 10 years…give or take a few decades…

Cuts - February 14, 2008 @ 5:38 pm

Firefox doesn’t support my website, just try to access any link on the left frame =C
IE supports almost all of my website features (used to support all) and I dont like Micro$oft…
My site was coded with just the notepad.

hurc - February 25, 2008 @ 4:42 pm

Cuts wrote:
…………………………
Firefox doesn’t support my website, just try to access any link on the left frame =C
IE supports almost all of my website features (used to support all) and I dont like Micro$oft…
My site was coded with just the notepad.
…………………….

You use frames, LOL. Get with the times, frames are on their way out. You can get the same effect (a stationary navigation bar/pane) using css.

Yes, there are only 2 reasons for having IE…. 1) to ensure you get infected with virii …… 2) to pay homage to Bill Gates because he is your lemming king. p*ss on Gates, he’s nothing but a crook who should be in jail for fraud and extortion.

Open source software and operating systems, Linux for example, is the future. Get with it or get left behind. There was a day when Linux was not too user friendly but those days are gone, it’s now more user friendly than Windows.

anish - February 25, 2008 @ 5:32 pm

cuts

use opera instead its like firefox

and also there is a setting for hte java or something which will let you click on the button you want

i’ve tried it trust me

tandy Sean - February 26, 2008 @ 6:54 pm

Great article, I linked to it on my site. After spending a few hours making a very simple javascript run photo slideshow I realized it doesn’t work at all in IE. Yet again! This just after spending hours on workarounds for another section of the site to accomodate the bastards. I give up! IE is making DOM developing a pain in the ass and makes me yearn for the prehistoric days of tables! Comply or be destroyed!

Cuts - March 2, 2008 @ 10:24 am

I find it easier to edit separate pages, also its better to just load a frame/page once instead of having to load the same navigation on each file
My firefox has all script options enabled and doesnt work :c
Does Opera still have ads and stuff?

Cuts - March 2, 2008 @ 10:29 am

Someone should make a real browser for once…
I tried them all and liked none..
Firefox seems nice, unlike the annoying I.E., but like all browsers as a great deal of things to improve… basic things that should have already been implemented…

sexy - March 10, 2008 @ 3:28 am

My ex uses Firefox. I hate it and its not any better then IE. I use IE and never had any problems or badware.
My ex has so much badware on her pc cause of it.

If you know how to configure IE, you can disable automatic activex downloads and many more features.

I wouldn’t down IE. I do down Firefox cause everyone is trying so hard to make us use it. IE is default. If we wanted a better browser, we would search for it. Ads suck!

If it was up to me I would tell them to use SlimBrowser from flashpeak.com
SlimBrowser is a True Web Browser.

i hate IE - March 18, 2008 @ 1:06 pm

i HATE IE! im mozilla firefox all the way!

im using it now…

and will…

for..

the rest of my life…

I am beta for new version

DMC - March 19, 2008 @ 9:49 am

Opera. Use opera. well better than firefox. IMO it sucks along with IE however IE8 is half-decent.

Get Firefox… Please? » In My Mind’s Zen Garden | cultivating enlightenment through music, raw foods, yoga and gardening - April 3, 2008 @ 8:46 am

[…] And in case you’re not convinced… some good reasons to dump Internet Explorer. […]

What do you think?

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