Microsoft finally gets it

Friday, March 14. 2008

I somehow missed Microsoft's announcement that (in a complete U-turn from previous announcements) IE8 will support web standards mode by default, and thus any broken sites will have to enable IE7 mode by a meta tag. So finally, IE will cease to be the albatross around the neck of the internet, and developers the world over will at last be able to write standards-compliant sites that work in all major browsers. I had real trouble believing that MS had convinced so many prominent web standards advocates (here and here) that the previous option was in some way a good thing, when it essentially meant that MS expected 99% of the web to change in order to support the 1% (almost entirely intranets and thus of no public interest) that are so badly written that they couldn't survive a browser update. I'm very happy to see this change of heart, which was a really unexpected thing to see from MS. They don't normally give a stuff about such things, so they fully deserve the adulation that their announcement is getting in the comments. It also vindicates the slagging I gave the authors of those articles promoting the evil meta tag! So, Thank you Microsoft! I look forward to not having to do anything special for IE - you probably just doubled the world's web development productivity rate! Who knows - one day IE might be as good as Firefox or Safari...

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