Destructionator XIII wrote:Isil`Zha wrote:So I provide test results after you call "bullshit" - so now you declare them "irrelevant" and then jump over to conspiracy theories?
They
are irrelevant. They don't actually test anything related to real world use nor are they an accurate representation of adherence to web standards, seeing how many of the tests are based on unstandardized drafts.
It also
is quite noticeable in the real world. I constantly come across pages that render oddly or totally incorrect in IE. I get text boxes, like this one for posting, where you hit, for example, the URL tag to be entered - instead of entering it at my cursor, IE puts it at the end of the text box. (I don't know if it actually does this on this forum software, but I've had it happen in several other places.)
Does ACID3 actually test for this? Is the bug in the browser or is it in the software?
Much easier to just blame Microsoft though.
phongn basically covered it already. The claim that it doesn't test "anything" related to the real world is asinine. FF doesn't even get it perfect (though Chrome does.) And of course there are sites that are poorly written - but having such a low score is just ridiculous. I and many others definitely notice IE incorrectly rendering pages or having compatibility issues far more than most other browsers.
The main idea behind stopping scripted content is security, which is why IE did it; the Internet Explorer browser is proactively secure, out of the box on Windows Server, and with a simple checkbox on home computers.
But speed is definitely a nice bonus, as is reliability. And being a perfect pop-up blocker, and being a perfect ad blocker. And stopping all noise makers and animations. The benefits never end!
Well clearly its js performance does cause issues. Now, as phongn already pointed out, NoScript does it better, and is easier to use.
That just means everyone else is fucking retarded and should make like a firefox and burn in hell. The technical term is "appeal to popularity fallacy".
I was referring to customization, you twat.
No developer (or maker of any product, for that matter) could make a core product that would be optimal for every single person. Not everyone thinks the same or organizes their stuff the same, or wants the interface the same. Hell, some people I work with have their tabs down the left-side, instead of across the top. I, personally, can't stand it that way, but they love it that way. How could an uncustomizable browser possibly accommodate both our tastes?
It can't. If you move the tab bar, you're customizing it.
I guess a tailored suit also means the suit must be a shitty product too, eh?
cus·tom·ize (kst-mz)
tr.v. cus·tom·ized, cus·tom·iz·ing, cus·tom·iz·es
To make or alter
to individual or personal specifications
So you have some odd hate of the ability to alter something to fit individual or personal specifications?
<snip>
Yes, indeed; if it was so good, why did he need to customize it in the first place?
In this specific case, it is double stupid since he first forked over extra cash for the name brand, then forked over even more money for what are surely useless customizations! Those are the marks of a poor financial planner; this kind of person should be hanged by the neck from a tall tree until dead dead dead to prevent the country from falling into a financial black hole and ruining millions of lives.
Okay, now I'm sure that you don't even know what customization
means. You customize something to
fit your, unique, personal tastes, wants, or needs. It is therefore
impossible for a product to fit those needs for absolutely everyone, out of the box, and thus, by your definition, all products are "shitty products" (ones that don't appeal to
your personal unique wants or needs, specifically.)
While using bad software might not lead to babies starving in the streets, people being willing to settle for lazy developers pawning their work on to the hapless end users still causes countless volumes of human suffering. Instead of the developer taking 30 minutes to do it right, now one add-on author has to spend 45 minutes doing it, and then 50 million individuals have to spend 5 minutes each locating, deciding on, and installing that plugin.
Competent developer: 30 man-minutes, job done
Incompetent developer: 96 man-years to do the same thing
What a gross misuse of statistics. Most add-on authors
enjoy doing it. And oh no, 5 minutes (a very high end figure if I ever saw one!) Besides, you typically end up saving yourself much more time in the long run customizing it to your liking. I know the tab organization alone saves me at least several minutes a day, or quite a bit more if I'm having to do a lot of research. Net gain for me.