Ask HN: What would it take for IE not to be hated?
After watching the new Microsoft troll ad for IE 10 on TechCrunch (which is actually pretty good), I started thinking about what it would take for IE not to be hated by the tech community.
For those that have done web dev, you'll know the pain it causes. CSS properties aren't supported, the debugger is terrible, etc.
Would solving those issues be enough for you not to hate IE? If not, what would be required?
15 comments
[ 4.1 ms ] story [ 43.8 ms ] threadI think this is because IE has been bad for many releases before being decent. Android has been near the same fate. Everyone thought that Android has a crappy user interface and a lot of people still think it even if now Android completely changed. Lucky it changed quickly, and so more people are giving it credit. But with IE, it's another story. In conclusion, possible, but it will take a lot of time and a lot of effort. I wonder if it's worth it. Microsoft should come up with some crazy revolutionary "killer feature", other way there will be no reason to switch back.
http://youtu.be/lD9FAOPBiDk
I don't hate IE, but for me to consider start using it, it would need to run on all major platforms and be open ala Chrome and Firefox. Otherwise, I don't see the point.
[edit] their best bet is to make the browser 'go away' so you can't even tell when you're in IE. I think they're actually taking steps towards this with the 'metro' version of the browser in Windows 8.
Chrome, Firefox, and Opera have proven innovative not just in the realm of CSS, JS, and HTML5 standards, but also in things like extensions, community, update cycles, etc. IE is constantly catching up, so even when it does become the "fastest browser" it is only that for a month. Then a new version of Chrome or Firefox comes out that is faster and has new features X,Y, and Z.
See, I'm a IE 'hater' not because 'IE sucks' but because in my current project I have 746 lines of CSS hacks to bring IE 7/8 to 2012 because MS is incapable of rolling out a functional, continuous update system.
The update system was not fixed.
Why can't it update automatically and save millions of dollars? Developers cost money and companies have to pay tons of unnecessary hours making a web page work on broken IE renderings.
I would not hate IE, and maybe even use it, if it could update itself without needing it's crap Windows Update thingy.
We're always wondering when the rug is (once again) going to be pulled out from under us.