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#1
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*Everybody* wins, if what you say is true. Anyway, I give up. I'm wrong. I *want* to design my site for *all* browsers. I get it now. That's the way to go. I have taken the first step - or, at least, one of the first steps - which is to download the latest versions of Netscape, Opera and Mozilla. (Um, do I actually *need* Netscape with all its bloat? Mozilla looks exactly the same. Do they render anything differently so that I would actually need both?) I only have Windows, so can only design for that and hope that folks with other OSes and systems will be polite when they tell me how crappy it looks. But here's the thing: You all were so kind enough to give me a bunch of links to sites and articles telling me how completely stupid I was for focussing on one browser, but you all neglected to send me any link to a site or article telling me how to code for all browsers. Someone said it was actually easier to code for all browsers rather than just IE. I don't see how that's possible, but I sit here with an open mind, waiting for you to fill it with helpful, useful information. I don't expect you to convince me that it is so - that's done already. I am converted (or, at least, ready and willing to be). I'm not asking for step-by-step instructions on absolutely everything, but I also don't want to try and wade through the W3C specs on 4.01. What I would like to ask is this: 1. Where is there a really good, well-written (i.e. "For Dummies"), comprehensive tutorial on writing for all browsers? 2. Should I embrace XHTML now or stick with HTML 4.01 until I get that mastered? (I have never tried XML - would it be such a huge leap to XHTML, or fairly intuitive considering my experience with HTML?) Seriously, I *do* have 7 years experience writing HTML. CSS is confusing but manageable to me and pretty much all of my JavaScript comes from other sources because I'm too dense to even follow a Dummies book on that. (Yes, I properly credit the creators of the scripts I steal, er, I mean, use.) Thanks in advance, and I hope this actually reaches someone and that I'm not in *everyone's* killfile ![]() |
#2
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It's not stupid to design for one browser |
#3
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..[snipped].. |
#4
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There used to be two groups: one said "do whatever the customer asks" and the other said "explain to the customer why what they're asking is wrong". Both were highly paid and had lots of work. I see the current market as a time when the first group will drop their prices, and the second group will accept that they may get less contracts. Both will have revenues reduced by a similar amount, but I believe the second group will be better positioned when things pick up again. The first group will have a hard time justifying an increase in rates, but they don't have time for more work since their strategy was to keep busy. The second group will keep charging the same rate they always have, but they have the time to double their workload. Comments? |
#5
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My time is worth money and I'll be damned if I'll waste it. |
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