Promises is still part of the ES6 Proposal; I don't even think it's necessarily a confirmed part of ES6; so it seems pretty silly to start docking points for not supporting it.
I don't understand why MS needs to implement their own rendering engines and all and maintain them, when there are clearly superior alternatives out there.
All the user really cares about is the browser's UI anyway.
It forces every web developer who is in a business model to think twice before they code, endless bugs are caused either because shit doesn't work in IE, or because it was made to work in IE so it works like crap for everything else.
And no, "use Windows Update" is not decent by any standard.
That is the one mistake they never learned from, and that is the one mistake that will ensure that we have to support IE11 years and years after it is no longer relevant.
And any other version of IE that comes shipped as a default browser with any major version of Windows for that matter.
I find that IE takes up a unnecessary part of CPU when just scrolling around with one tab (usually with the dev tools open). I use Chrome all the time and that performance hit is never noticeable.
@SecondRikudo Uhh, what exactly is your argument about the business world. It sure sounded like your argument was "It's IE's fault that the business world uses old versions of IE"
@SecondRikudo No, you're required to support older versions because IE's customers want them to support older versions. Not because there's no auto update.
@SecondRikudo Uhh, as someone who works in the business world, I'm pretty sure it is. A lot of the business world usage of older IE is for internal tools.
Rapid release cycles are definitely the way to go but if I developed something for IE7 using a proprietary API and couldn't upgrade becasue they dropped that API I'd be pissed too.
Given how modern VM technology is amazing, and the fact IE is built into windows as part of the shell rather than modularized - they should just run a mini-vm with mini-windows with old IE for compatibility.
@copy you realize IE only has those problems because of how successful it was and the only reason that netscape didn't have them is that it died. Chrome is starting to have similar problems already.
my 2 cents: I thank the IE team for all of the many innovations they have brought to the web. I hate shitty clients who ask for support without justifying the need for it. I snicker when I think all of the chinese government uses IE6
@SecondRikudo I'm not sure you and I mean the same thing when we talk about proprietary APIs here - I'm not talking about AJAX, I'm talking about stuff like running XAML on web pages, ActiveX and so on.
@SecondRikudo I don't know, it's very hard to tell - for companies who spent millions on software portals to have to spend millions more just because some internet people don't like their API and Microsoft won't support them is super shitty too.
My two cents are that as a developer linux has a lot of cool stuff at the OS level that's fun to play with windows doesn't expose or document or have but as an architecture windows always feels more sound with lower stronger abstractions. As a user I don't really care that much which I use.
@SecondRikudo As a developer, stuff like IOCP and not having stuff like "everything is a file" or string manipulation and parsing as a way to pass stuff around.
Gah, there are two types of questions: "hi, i'm trying to do X with [Library] and it doesn't work. anyone know why?" OR "Here's my entire source code for the project I'm working on with [Library]. Can you find my bugs for me? Thanks."
My favorite is I recently answered one that solved their immediate problem, that they were asking about, so they comment back "thanks, but now it's not working because [other problem]" and neither upvoted nor accepted my answer.