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CSSquirrel » ie9 http://cssquirrel.com/blog opinions and news on web design Mon, 06 Feb 2012 17:41:49 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.3.1 Forest Browser Friends: The Great Race http://cssquirrel.com/blog/2011/03/16/forest-browser-friends-the-great-race/ http://cssquirrel.com/blog/2011/03/16/forest-browser-friends-the-great-race/#comments Wed, 16 Mar 2011 20:49:02 +0000 Kyle Weems http://www.cssquirrel.com/blog/?p=844 CSSquirrel #84: Forest Browser Friends - The Great Race!

Even if haters can’t admit it out loud, they probably need to admit it to themselves deep down inside: Nine is a contender.

For years, Internet Explorer has been out of the game when it comes to any discussion of what constitutes a modern browser. Version 8, as much as it was a drastic improvement over what had come before, was something I viewed more as a correction of 6 and 7′s many errors, and clearly not an effort towards embracing more modern features.

But Nine? Hardware acceleration. A blazingly fast JavaScript engine. Robust CSS3 support (missing things, but includes a decent chunk of what I wanted to see). HTML5 features like <video>, <audio> and even <canvas>. SVG support. On top of it all it’s got a slick, minimalist interface.

Internet Explorer 9 is a modern browser. Period. Dissenters and naysayers are at best nitpicking and at worse lashing out due to old habit.

There are downsides. I wish that they’d made it for XP, but as Microsoft is in the habit of selling operating systems I understand how complex of an issue that might be for their business model. It doesn’t include all the CSS3 I want to see (gradients, anyone?) but they do give a reasonable-sounding reasoning why (ostensibly, they don’t want to add a feature that has to be changed or removed later, and gradients currently have at least two exclusive syntaxes).

But the bottom line is that although IE9 isn’t perfect, it’s also not the flawed, stunted beast of ill-will and developer-consuming horror that its ancestors were. We, as designers, should be grateful that we’ve got another modern browser making our websites look better (and capable of doing more) without requiring us to craft different code for different browsers.

(But feel free to kvetch about the challenge in getting XP users to upgrade to a modern browser. My opinion on that? Tell them to use Chrome or Opera.)

The Orange, Flaming Elephant In The Room

I don’t, as a rule, use Internet Explorer as my daily browser. After all, I want the whole, real web, and historically it was not the best candidate for that. Now that Nine is out, I’ve found in the past couple days that my tolerance levels for my de facto browser, one Mr. Firefox, is suddenly waning.

Firefox is slow.

Today’s comic makes light of this sad, sad bit of information.

Additionally, when using some newer “HTML5″ JS features (such as localStorage) I’ve found Firefox even locking up on what seems like a quick, trivial task for competitors like Chrome. And the old mainstay of my reason to keep Firefox, the plugins, is no longer as unique a feature as it was. I’ve been trying to stick it out until Firefox 4 is released, but I’m losing confidence rapidly in Mozilla’s formerly delicious love child. When using a laptop or trying to quickly load a page to show a friend a neat bit of code or a cute cat video, I’ve lost my patience with Firefox. I’ll fire up Chrome… or Heaven forfend, I’ve even used IE9 in the past day.

I’m not convinced that Internet Explorer’s plunge in its percentage of browser users is going to change yet, despite IE9. I do think, however, that if current trends continue then Firefox is going to find itself facing a plunge of its own while IE’s fortune improves. Of all the modern browsers out there it currently seems to be lagging the most.

That’s right, I said it. I think Firefox is lagging behind Internet Explorer now in terms of modernity.

It’s all well and good to support gradients and other CSS3 features. But right now with the blossoming trend of web apps and the general push to a web-based computer culture, speed is becoming the king of relevance in making a browser worth using. And at the moment, I’m not convinced Firefox 4 is improving enough to close the gap.

Nine isn’t going to be my browser of choice. It’ll take some time yet before Microsoft can convince me to get back to using the big blue e on a regular basis. But its dramatic improvement has made me strongly examine my current browser of choice. I hear Chrome has Firebug.

Good show, Nine. Firefox, time to pony up.

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Comic Update: An Ovation Apart http://cssquirrel.com/blog/2010/09/16/comic-update-an-ovation-apart/ http://cssquirrel.com/blog/2010/09/16/comic-update-an-ovation-apart/#comments Thu, 16 Sep 2010 17:07:59 +0000 Kyle Weems http://www.cssquirrel.com/?p=754 An Event Apart: DC is running at this very moment. I am not there, sadly, but I am living the experience vicariously through A Feed Apart (which is awesome and you should check it out now) Via that very feed, I learned of applause, as unlikely as it sounds, that Dan Cederholm led the crowd in for IE9. Today’s comic memorializes that event, and also includes Eric Meyer and Jeffrey Zeldman, the two dudes without whom this awesome conference would not exist. (It turns out they’re also very awesome in person. Really. They don’t bite or anything.)

Seriously, if you ever can get to an AEA event, I implore you to go. It’s an awesome experience being surrounded by like-minded web geeks getting leading edge advice and techniques for that thing we do with making the web.

Look, let’s drop the issue of tribe for the moment: IE9 is a better browser than IE8, period. I won’t make it my steady gal, but it’s helping push the web in the right direction by getting Microsoft’s behemoth back on track with everyone else. I’m glad someone at AEA decided to lead the crowd in acknowledging that fact.

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Comic Update: That Is Fast http://cssquirrel.com/blog/2010/09/15/comic-update-that-is-fast/ http://cssquirrel.com/blog/2010/09/15/comic-update-that-is-fast/#comments Wed, 15 Sep 2010 19:04:13 +0000 Kyle Weems http://www.cssquirrel.com/?p=751 Today’s comic features the woodland creatures side of CSSquirrel, with the Opera Moose, Naepalm (the animal version of Mindfly Studio’s very own Janae) and none other than IE9 himself.

I’m actually shocked by the IE9 beta that was released today. It’s got a slick, minimal interface that is such a radical departure from what I’m accustomed to from Internet Explorer that I’m left speechless. It’s also fast. Surprisingly so.

These two facts are just a small portion of what IE9 brings to the table. Improved CSS3 support. HTML5 elements are now supported, including beautiful elements like <video>, <audio> and and the sexy girl on the block: <canvas>.

I could wax eloquent, but I prefer to direct your attention to smarter people saying the same thing with better word choices, like Rey Bango. Go check his blog post on the topic right now.

One beef people are pulling out to disparage the new release with is IE9′s lack of support on XP. I get the gist of where they’re coming from: the less operating systems IE9 is supported on, the harder it’ll get to make hardliners upgrade off IE6 or 7. But the fact is, XP is old. Really old. You don’t see people complaining because Safari 5 isn’t supported on Mac OS X 10.4, do you? I’m sure the reason Apple didn’t do backwards support is the reason Microsoft did what they’re doing. Both are in the habit of selling OSes. And if you’re not calling Apple down for that behavior, it’s more than a little hypocritical to do the same to Microsoft.

(Frankly, If you’re using a beast of an old OS, I suggest you go to other vendors like Mozilla and Opera for your modern web experience. Or upgrade your OS. Which path you pick is probably based on your pocketbook.)

Speaking of which, I’m not an IE user. It’s catching up, but it hasn’t surpassed my experience with other browsers like Firefox or Chrome (although FF is getting chunky in a way that alarms me, but I believe version 4 is going to correct that). But it’s improving by leaps and bounds, and I think we should acknowledge the effort Microsoft is putting into burying the mistakes of their past.

If you’d like to check IE9 out, you can download the beta here.

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Comic Update: IE Nine Means Business http://cssquirrel.com/blog/2010/03/22/comic-update-ie-nine-means-business/ http://cssquirrel.com/blog/2010/03/22/comic-update-ie-nine-means-business/#comments Mon, 22 Mar 2010 18:26:05 +0000 Kyle Weems http://www.cssquirrel.com/?p=643 Today’s comic features Internet Explorer 9. Well, it features that browser if it existed as a tough-as-nails video-game playing entity in the world of Tron. The theme of today’s jaunt owes itself to the gorgeous new trailers for Tron Legacy. I used to think every geek worth their salt had seen the original movie in this franchise, but recently learned at least three of my co-workers at Mindfly have gone their whole lives without witnessing the amazing light-cycle battles and disc duels.

As a result, I now live in a world where everything I’ve taken for granted is flipped upside down. I need to make a rental and rectify the situation.

The rest of the comic owes itself to the cornucopia of information now flooding the web tubes about IE9, starting at SXSW and running over us like a tsunami from Redmond. The IE team’s blog is a pipe filled with revelations. Drink from it. HTML5 support including <video>? Check. Prettier typography? Check. SVG? Check. Way faster JavaScript? Check. Adding support for some CSS3? (Note the word “some”, folks. The concept of complete “CSS3 Support” is a myth.)

What the heck is going on? If there was one thing we could rely on as website creators, it was that the Big Blue E was a drunken frat boy knocking over the furniture, throwing up on the carpet, and generally making a mess of any tidy rooms you designed. Yet, version Nine Point Oh is not only helping wash away the stink of earlier failures (like Eight’s noble attempts at correcting the errors of Six and Seven), but rather pushing aggressively forward to be off the bench and in the game with other “modern browsers.”

I guess we’ll all have to accept the truth: Microsoft is not in fact a bunch of blithering idiots. Having met several of their employees, I’d say it’s quite the opposite. They’re aware of what they need to do to keep relevant (or rather, regain relevancy) in the browser game, and they’re doing it.

I’m not adopting IE as my browser of choice anytime soon. But I for one am jazzed and excited to think of how soon I can ditch <embed> and <object> in future sites for a simple clean <video> without making 62% of the web’s users incapable of seeing a video.

IE 9′s improvements might be bad news for competing vendors trying to distinguish themselves from the dominant browser (although I doubt IE is catching up fast enough to cause worries for them yet), but it’s good news for designers and users everywhere.

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