Get a better browser!
20th February 2003
Via Scott, this oh-so-true quote from a Microsoft “next-generation technology” consultant:
Internet Explorer hasn’t had any revolutionary features for over 3 versions now. And it’s now surprise why. No outside push. Not to say Internet Explorer is bad. But I use it more because it’s always there not because it’s necessarily better than other alternatives that I would have to download and install.
I’ve been telling my friend’s something similar for a while. Internet Explorer 6 is now over a year and a half old, and in my opinion just doesn’t cut it as a serious browsing platform any more. It’s fine for casual use, but if like me you spend well over an hour every day surfing the web you would almost certainly be better off with something more capable. Pop-up blocking, tabbed browsing and fixed-sized-font resizing all go a long way towards making the web a more pleasant and productive place—not to mention the fact that most really lame advertising techniques use MS proprietary DHTML and fail to work at all in other browsers.
It’s not like the alternative options are even particularly arduous to install. Opera 7 for Windows weighs in at a paltry 3.2 MB without Java support and Phoenix (my browser of choice) is only 6.2 MB. Both install without making any unpleasant changes to your system and are easy to remove if you decide you don’t like them. If you do a lot of web development Mozilla offers a superb range of web development related tools for only a 11 MB of your valuable download time.
The only reason I can see to stick with IE is if you frequently work with a web-based application that requires proprietary IE extensions (such as the ever problematic contentEditable
), and of course for testing sites to ensure they stay compatible with the web’s most wide-spread browser. For every day web browsing you can be a lot more productive with something else.
Further reading:
More recent articles
- Weeknotes: more datasette-secrets, plus a mystery video project - 7th May 2024
- Weeknotes: Llama 3, AI for Data Journalism, llm-evals and datasette-secrets - 23rd April 2024
- Options for accessing Llama 3 from the terminal using LLM - 22nd April 2024
- AI for Data Journalism: demonstrating what we can do with this stuff right now - 17th April 2024
- Three major LLM releases in 24 hours (plus weeknotes) - 10th April 2024
- Building files-to-prompt entirely using Claude 3 Opus - 8th April 2024
- Running OCR against PDFs and images directly in your browser - 30th March 2024
- llm cmd undo last git commit - a new plugin for LLM - 26th March 2024
- Building and testing C extensions for SQLite with ChatGPT Code Interpreter - 23rd March 2024
- Claude and ChatGPT for ad-hoc sidequests - 22nd March 2024