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I find it hilarious that you devoted so much time bashing arguments in the context of "Upgrading IE6" that were written in the context of "Upgrading IE6, Windows XP, and just about any other program that is mildly outdated"
Truthfully, most of my arguments are worthless in that one post from my view as well, as long as the scope is assumed to be "IE6 only".
Your arguments remain worthless anyway, but I will indulge.
Cost. At this point, you should have at least considered that the arguments were for a more broad area than just browsers.
Settings/tweaks. Getting new ones for an alternate browser is much easier than for a new OS.
Backwards Compatibility. The web was designed for this. HTML is supposed to degrade gracefully where possible. Inter-OS backwards compatibility, not so much(although in the earlier days of windows...)
Ooh, I "should have considered," huh? How about no,
you shouldn't be trying to move the goalposts when you are shown to be full of it?You were talking browsers. I don't care if you use XP; you aren't an overt danger to everyone else because you're using it. You
are an infection vector
for other people when you are using a known shitpile of security holes
and then trying to encourage other people to, too.
The cost argument remains irrelevant, and you are backpedaling because you know you're wrong. Give up.
The sheer number of changes that has accumulated between XP and 7 is bordering on the diffrence between windows and mac, and that has well over a decade of arguments, since each side is easier to perople who are already there, and neither side will admit it.
Nonsense. I sat down in front of a Vista machine and was productive in about fifteen minutes, and Windows 7 isn't a significant change from Vista. Your own inability to address minor changes is nobody else's problem.
Will you continue to advocate a world where everyone is on one OS, one Browser, one media player, one email viewer? All in the name of progress and "security"?
Certainly not (though there should be a reference implementation of all web standards, and anyone even moderately divergent from this is
wrong).
Diversity is the bane of viruses, as few people care to create a universal virus that can exploit flaws in all systems. If everyone was on windows 7, then the first universal flaw would be the end of everything. OS diversity is critical, but even diffrent OS versions helps. Although they may fix 10 bugs, there is a chance that 1 new one appears due to their efforts. Anyone exploiting that one new bug will only see results where the target has upgraded. If there was only one antivirus ever used, than virus makers would only have to design against it's strong points. Because there are multiple antivirus programs, one flaw is no longer a universal gateway in.
What is this babble? You
do realize that virtually every exploit that has been found in modern versions of Internet Explorer
exists and is worse in older versions? (Of course you don't, otherwise you wouldn't bother with this crap.) The software monoculture argument only exists when there are
multiple comparable options. And multiple comparable options do exist: IE8, Firefox, Chrome, Opera, Safari. IE6 is not a comparable option because it is backassward caveman software.
You are attempting to manufacture reasons why "well, I'm not
entirely wrong!!111". It's transparent and it's sad.
Nobody, including Microsoft, thinks that you are even remotely correct. Stop even trying.
I don't mind you bashing my arguments, but as soon as you continue on to insult *me*, it becomes intolerably rude. Please refrain from incuring further uncivil debate by keeping the fight between arguments, and avoiding personal attacks.
Then don't be intellectually dishonest.
Also, when you complain about me deciding to use IE6, know this: I keep a fully upgraded copy of firefox, BECAUSE IT CAN COEXIST. If I must, I use it. If I knew that IE7 or 8 could coexist with IE6, I would have no problem with upgrading, but since I know that 7 or 8 will hijack file extension bindings and alter the registry for it's own process, I know that IE6 will be either damaged or disabled entirely in the process, so will not upgrade.
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THAT IS THE FUCKING POINT OF UPGRADING AWAY FROM IE6.Jesus. The point is to
kill it with fire so it can't continue to serve as a vector for shitware of all kinds. The point is to
get away from it, not to keep it around "oh, just in case." Because of the way Windows uses Trident internally, there is no way to improve security without removing it entirely. There's absolutely no reason to keep it around!
Can you argue against that? That IE8 won't displace 6, with no way to restore it if I prefer IE6? No, you can't.
Ooh, man, you're so fuckin' tough, huh? "Oh no you can't!" Did you do the head-shake and Z-snap while you were at it?
Don't be dense. IE6
should be removed, there's no decent reason to
want a rollback. (Hint: yes, this means your scrambling excuses aren't decent reasons.)
Have you ever heard of how microsoft altered windows95 so that when you ran simcity, windows would refrain from freeing memory immediately, so that a *bug* in simcity that was harmless on previous versions of windows would not cause problems when the users upgraded.
That wasn't good behavior in the first place.
Fix errors, do not hide them. It is the software vendor's job to comply with the behavior of the operating system. If something breaks,
fix the software. Do not patch the operating system to make the software not suck when it is the software's job to not suck.
This is the difference between bog-standard end users who think they're l33t, and somebody who understands software design: you just want to whine and say it's different and thus it's bad, and I am saying it's
better, thus it's
good.
Also, that up to VB6, you could impost code from any past project, evne between the virst version of visual basic _ever_, and the last released version ov VB6. Then .net came, and all that preciously maintained backwards compatibility was lost.
...because Visual Basic 6 and earlier were bug-filled, slow, problematic
wrecks of software. Visual Basic .NET is a fully compliant CLR language that can actually interoperate with software written
in this century. Backwards compatibility is in no way an inherent good, and can be a net negative. Windows is well into net-negative territory and has been for quite some time; the jump to AMD64 would have been an
excellent time to refactor APIs to get the fuck away from the mess that is Win32, but they refused because it would have broken compatibility. The payoff would have been far superior software quality and development experiences, but they would not take it.
Good christ. Do you really think you win some kind of point by invoking VB6?
Nobody who ever did significant work with VB6 thought it was good. It was a bizlogic language contorted into general purpose programming.
At what point are you going to realize that you are just horribly, horribly outmatched here, and it would be a good idea to stop?
Read this, and then tell me how much *effort* was put into ensuring that users who didn't like IE7 or 8 could return to whatever version they had before. Come on, tell me. If you can point out an easy way to revert, in 3 easy steps not much harder than a click of a button, then I may actually upgrade.
Joel Sposky doesn't interest me, and what he has to say has no bearing on a
security update--which is what IE6->IE8 is. There is no good reason to back out of the IE6->IE8 upgrade. None. Your preferences don't fucking take precedence over becoming an active danger to other people, and it's better software besides.
If you can't, then just face it, that I am too dead set on my prefrences for your arguments to succeed, no matter how good they may seem to you.
Oh, get off your high fucking horse. You don't matter enough for me to bother with, you're too convinced of your own nonexistence competence to listen. I'm slotted off that you have the temerity to try to infect others with your
bad advice.
Your advice will hurt people if it is taken. It is wrong. Stop giving it.I am doubtlessly not alone in stubbornly sticking to IE6.
Yeah you are. IE6 usage is dropping off a sheer cliff. It essentially exists only in the corporate world, and migrations away from XP are killing that quickly. Unfortunately, we have another four years of dealing with that piece of shit. Maybe by then we can actually have something halfway decent.
For me, it is prefrence despite liking the later ones(not as much as IE6, though, or I would have upgraded long ago), but others might be afraid of losing what little they know of their browser.
Users don't give a shit what browser they have. It opens a homepage and they click links. The only people who are making a big deal about OH MY GOD I MIGHT HAVE TO UPGRADE BUT GOD DAMMIT I AM FAR TOO MUCH OF A LEET HAXXOR TO DO IT are people like you: without the domain-specific knowledge to understand what's going on, but far, far too convinced of their own capabilities to listen to people (read: me) who actually
do have a commanding grasp of the topic.
My only concern is that somebody might read your tripe and think you're somehow knowledgeable enough to be treated as an authoritative source, and potentially damage their computers by following your shitty advice.
Think of this as a test. If you can convince *me* that downgrading is at least nearly as easy as upgrading, and that no settings will be lost in either transition, then you have an argument that convince *them*, the people with less of an understanding, who remain behind because they don't know any better.
I don't care what you do. Get your computer pwnt. At this point, you deserve it.