IE8 FAILS Acid Tests

Posted on 2008.07.09
Categories: Software; Tagged with: , , , , ,

I was very skeptical back in December 2007 when Microsoft released a PNG image indicating that an internal build of IE8 passed the Acid2 test (Acid Tests are complex pieces of coding which test the standards compliance of any browser). And I said:

Everyone’s just so optimistic for IE to be standards-compliant that they’ve disregarded Microsoft’s capacity and history of lying.

Guess what? Now that there’s a beta of Internet Explorer to be downloaded, which Microsoft claims features “improved interoperability and compatibility”, I can entirely disprove the previous claim that IE8 passed the Acid2 test. (Note: it doesn’t take much to pass Acid2; current versions of Firefox, Safari, Opera, and other browsers pass it easily.)

This is what Acid2 looks like on IE8 (top) and the reference rendering (bottom):

It’s plainly obvious that Internet Explorer is incompetent at displaying even the relatively basic Acid2 test.

Let’s examine what happens with Internet Explorer 8 and Acid3. Once again, IE8’s screenshot is on the top and the reference rendering is on the bottom.

Big difference, eh?

There. I’ve completely and utterly debunked the false claims that IE8 passes the Acid2 test. Once again, it’s the people creating the product who spread misleading information specifically to promote their product.

For all the web developers and designers out there: DON’T take advantage of IE8’s new proprietary features; urge Microsoft to support web standards, which they have embarrassingly FAILED to do for more than the past decade.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 5 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

Mozilla Firefox 3 Beta 5

Posted on 2008.04.03
Categories: Software; Tagged with: , , , ,

Firefox logo

Yesterday, on April 2, the Mozilla Foundation released the latest beta build of Mozilla Firefox 3, Beta 5. Apparently, there have been 750 changes since Beta 4, and some sites will perform better with Beta 5. A lot of bugs have been fixed, and Gmail is much faster.

A blog on ZDNet covered this release and talked about the memory leak fixes. Someone on CNET also mentioned the Back/Forward button issue, which John C. Dvorak also mentioned on his most recent Tech5 episode.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (3 votes, average: 3.67 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

Screencast: Safari 3.1

Posted on 2008.03.24
Categories: Software; Tagged with: , , , , ,

Well, it took me a few days, but here’s the Safari screencast. It also compares Safari 3.1 with Mozilla Firefox 3.0 beta 4.

Since it didn’t convert to Flash on blip.tv, below is a link to the original QuickTime movie. It is about 58 MB in size, and was created using the H.264 (great resolution but smaller file size) codec. You will need Apple QuickTime Player to view this.

Video thumbnail. Click to play
Click to play

You can download Safari from Apple’s web site.

If you prefer Firefox and don’t have it yet, .

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (6 votes, average: 3.33 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

Safari 3.1

Posted on 2008.03.20
Categories: Software; Tagged with: , , ,

I recently installed Safari 3.0.4 on Windows XP Professional x64 Edition, but have now upgraded to Safari 3.1.

There are some excellent benefits of using Safari which I will discuss in my next post tomorrow.

Safari is, in many ways, superior to Firefox 2.0.0.12.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (6 votes, average: 2.83 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

When to use JavaScript, when to use PHP

Posted on 2008.02.13
Categories: Web Development; Tagged with: , , , , , , ,

As the number of Web 2.0 sites and networks increases significantly the latter part of this decade, we are seeing increased use of technologies like AJAX, JSON, and XML-based data interchanges. This necessitates certain programming to handle data and user interaction, but it’s often debated whether client-side scripting like JavaScript should be used so extensively.

This article will discuss the simpler aspects of using JavaScript, the simpler aspects of using PHP, and will discuss when to use one or the other.

(more…)

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

IE8 passes Acid2 test ???

Posted on 2007.12.31
Categories: Software; Tagged with: , , , ,

They say that an internal build of Internet Explorer 8 has passed the Acid2 test, a CSS-compatibility testing page from the Web Standards Project, but I question it: is it necessarily so?

It ain’t necessarily so…

The one screenshot we have seen “verifying” this claim is the following PNG image from Microsoft itself:

IE8 on Acid (2)

and I see no third-party verification of this claim. Everyone’s just so optimistic for IE to be standards-compliant that they’ve disregarded Microsoft’s capacity and history of lying. (Example: anti-trust lawsuit of late 1990’s.)

Maybe, just maybe, they’re saying this way ahead of time to generate some hype for their yet non-released product. Maybe, just maybe, the image they’ve published was created or modified on some image-editing program — Photoshop? Maybe, just maybe, they’ve created a basic HTML page that uses the reference rendering that is guaranteed to display properly on ANY modern browser!!!

I’d hate to be like that John C. Dvorak guy from Tech5, but I have to be suspicious of this claim. It’s wild… we see no evidence other than a clearly modified (cropped) screenshot and some words from a guy being paid to work for a monopoly that will do no good to maintain that position (example: compliance with the raised middle finger).

All in all… just be careful when you see news that is too good to be true.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...