Is Microsoft scre***g the web community again?
Many of the leading luminaries of modern standards-based web design have been very excited about the upcoming release of IE7; the promise of not having to support yet another crappy browser has been very tempting.
Let’s recap what’s happened, though.
- MSFT announces that known hacks won’t work, and that developers should rely on conditional comments to target IE. At this point, I thought, “Oh no, here we go. They’re going to prevent us from targeting IE7, and IE7 won’t actually render things properly, so we’ll be left out to hang.”
- MSFT makes progress, best illustrated by Molly Holzschlag’s recap of IE7’s rendering progress (including the rendering of Malarkey’s site). I’ll admit, with the latest release of IE7 beta 2, I thought there was light at the end of the tunnel. Removing the ability to specifically target IE7 isn’t a problem as long as it renders according to the standards.
- Roger Johansson points out that the latest IE7 beta, the so-called “layout complete” version, doesn’t clear floats properly! Check the comments if you want to see some vitriol.
- Nick Rigby points out that the “layout complete” IE7 only fixes 6 of the 7 bugs in his IE7 test suite.
So, essentially, IE7 is still going to be a broken browser, but without hacks we’ll have no way to target it. Wasn’t the whole point to have an IE browser that didn’t need special support? Thanks, Microsoft, you’re doing a bang-up job spending lots of money to make lots of headaches.
Lonicera ciliosa (Caprifoliaceae); Orange honeysuckle

Cute site, but have you thought about using CSS for the headings instead of Flash? They’re not very accessible as is, and I know there are others who like me have Flash turned off. (By the way, your forms need a little more markup to be Triple-A Compliant.)
Best of luck with the site. I’ll be visiting again.