Elliott C. Back: In Aere Aedificare

IE8: Acid Test Passes

Posted in Spread IE, Browsers, Microsoft, Firefox by Elliott Back on March 6th, 2008.

You’ll be surprised to see that Internet Explorer 8 Beta (8.0.6001.14184) does better on the Acid2 test than Firefox 2 (2.0.0.12) does:

acid2-ff-vs-ie.png
Safari also passes the Acid2 test, but nobody uses it

The results are far worse on the Acid3 test, with IE8 scoring 17% and Firefox scoring 50%, but I believe they are intended. See, when Microsoft releases Beta 2 of their browser, it will definitely pass the Acid3 tests to give the community just that much more shock and awe:

acid3-firefox-vs-ie.png
Safari gets 39%, yay?

Ironically, the IE8 website throws an error when viewed with IE8. I guess that’s what they mean by improved standards compliance:

ie8-error.png

Worse, the Official Microsoft Site prompts to install some nasty, spyware-looking ActiveX control to view the IE8 site:

active-x.png

Congratulations Microsoft, on passing the Acid2, but unfortunately you have a laundry list of things to do, not limited to (a) make it faster and lighter than Firefox, (b) build in good developer tools, (c) get rid of ActiveX, (d) make a more usable UI, or (e) fix your own website to work in IE.

IE8 Standards Compliant, Finally

Posted in Spread IE, Browsers, Microsoft, Interface, Scandal by Elliott Back on March 3rd, 2008.

Today the IE blog made the most important announcement of its life with Microsoft’s Interoperability Principles and IE8, saying:

We’ve decided that IE8 will, by default, interpret web content in the most standards compliant way it can. This decision is a change from what we’ve posted previously. Microsoft recently published a set of Interoperability Principles. Thinking about IE8’s behavior with these principles in mind, interpreting web content in the most standards compliant way possible is a better thing to do.

ie8.jpg

Already, web designers are calling this the “holy grail” of Internet Explorer web development, and possibly the best suggestion the Microsoft IE team has ever made. Here’s a choice quote from Eric Meyer:

I’m glad that IE will act as browsers have always done, and default to the latest and greatest in the absence of any explicit direction to the contrary. I’m doubly glad that the IE team is willing to do that, even knowing what they have to handle. And I’m triply glad that the proposal was made in public ahead of time, with plenty of opportunity for debate, so that we could have a chance to weigh in and affect the browser’s behavior.

Broken Links is saying “I am very pleasantly surprised; this is a very wise decision.” Robert McLaws thinks, “This is great news for the web standards community… but not-so-great news for the billions of web pages out there.”

Microsoft’s Mistake: Vista Editions

Posted in Microsoft, Optimization by Elliott Back on March 2nd, 2008.

One of the reasons that Microsoft’s Vista operating system isn’t as successful as Windows XP (see Was Windows XP Microsoft’s last good OS?) is that it suffers from a version explosion. Where Windows XP offered a Home and Professional version which differed from each other in a simple list of features, Windows Vista comes in five versions:

vista.jpg
Note that visual studio actually has 8 versions…

This is in comparison to OSX, which comes in one version, and linux which comes in hundreds of versions but is at least free. Perhaps their next os, vienna, will come in a single edition at a single global price, but that’s probably too much to hope for.

Pop Music Killed Rap

Posted in Links by Elliott Back on March 1st, 2008.

The reason rap is dead is not because they sold out to corporations, it’s because they sold out to doing random solos in pop songs.

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