Andrea Giammarchi wrote:

At that point I would consider IE6 "broke".

Hahah... it was broken at the starting gate... probably by design.

Every standard conformance test can tell you since years that IE6 is broken. At that 
point, you'll be exactly in the same situation, if your customers do not want to update 
for same reason they are not doing right now, why would you leave them "alone" 
next July when everybody is screaming against that horror software.

IE6 had glorious days 7 years ago, now it's like complaining that petrol 
stations do not sell carbon to go anymore ... the utopia is: if tomorrow 
everybody will stop to support IE6 these deprecated companies will have to 
update - it works with everything, marketing speaking, it does not work with 
IE6, 'cause it's Microsoft marketing.

Finally, apparently IE6 support is reminded until 2014, but for "support" they 
mean only major security problems with zero fixes about leaks, render engine, JScript, 
CSS support, etc etc ... but of course with SilverLight everything will be fantastic and 
still Microsoft Approved, they are simply doing their business, and we are simply 
passively following it.

In a lot of the work I do these days I have to support IE6 because it's the defacto browser in various government departments. It'll be sometime before it is completely ousted.

Cheers,
Rob.
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http://www.interjinn.com
Application and Templating Framework for PHP

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