« Reply #179 on: Wed, 17 February 2010, 00:13:54 »
There are still people running 2k...some even with 98...these people can't go beyond IE6 as far as IE goes, so if they aren't using a more modern browser (and we know at least some aren't) those people will hold the rest of the world back (contrary to popular belief, yes, the world will wait for them, even if impatiently).
I don't tightly catering to people who are sticking with Windows 2000 and 98 really makes a lot of marketing sense because we could probably put those people into one of three categories:
- Low income: can't upgrade, can't buy anything from your website anyway
- Hobbyists: likely have other options if they absolutely need to use your site
- Crazy people: GeekHackers... need I say more?

Actually, there's a fourth category I forgot about... the Institutional users, but I guess that's just a different kind of crazy. These are people whose organizations have mission critical apps that were made to run within IE6.
The other thing is that most things work ok in IE6. The complaint that we Web developers have with IE6 isn't that our sites don't work at all in IE6. It's that they're glitchy and they look a bit off, but oftentimes they're usable.
Dropping IE6 support doesn't mean that sites will stop working in IE6. It just means that we stop devoting 5-10% of our project time to bastardizing CSS and JavaScript so that it'll be compatible with IE6 without messing up other browsers. The end result is a site that probably isn't any worse than your typical handheld browser experience on a typical site.

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