October 2006

IE7 Ripple Effects

by Andy Brudtkuhl on October 31, 2006

So now that Internet Explorer 7 has been pushed to the masses – what are the effects?

I got an interesting email today from Simon Griffin at Etre – a company that “… design, manage, and deliver profitable user experiences”. They run a pretty good blog as well.

I have written about this much in the last few weeks as I disagree with Microsoft’s position of ‘pushing’ out the browser through high priority Automatic Windows Updates. A few weeks before the release Microsoft released some how-to articles and a readiness kit to bring your website up to date for IE7.

This prompted Etre’s study:

“So on Friday 20th October – just two days after IE7 was released – we kicked off a short internal study. We fired up two machines and compared the homepages of all one hundred FTSE 100 companies in both IE6 and IE7. Were these companies ready for IE7? Were their sites bent badly out of shape? Or has this all been a big fuss over nothing? (Y2K bug anybody?)”

The test sample includes the FTSE 100, which is the 100 largest companies listed on the London Stock Exchange. One interesting tidbit I enjoyed was the following:

“It’s worth pointing out however that the general lack of adherence to web standards amongst the FTSE 100 companies may have insulated them somewhat from IE7′s various bugs and glitches (IE7 tends to struggle most with standards-compliant sites – particularly those using hacks and filters to achieve decent presentation in IE6). Given that most sites aren’t standards-compliant however, we think our results are pretty representative.”

So what were the results – 13% of the sites broke (whether rendering or layout issues).

“Generalising our findings to the internet as a whole – which is admittedly of dubious meaning and therefore should be taken with a pinch of salt – suggests that there are around 12.7 million websites in need of a little TLC as a result of the introduction of IE7.

(A recent study by Netcraft identified 97,932,447 websites on the internet. And if 13 out of 100 are affected by IE7 – per our findings – that’s 12,731,218 sites that need to be updated).”

You can read their findings through their blog post. After many inquiries they released a FAQ about the details of their study. You can read that here.

I would like to thank Etre for this study as it sheds some light on the potential ripple effects this release can have on the web development community. Do you know of any similar tests out there? I would like to know so I can compare the results.

Also if you are having problems getting your site to work right in IE7, contact Etre for help.

(In case you were wondering GANB looks fine in IE7).

 

Tags: , , , , ,

{ 1 comment }

What To Do When Zombies Attack

by Andy Brudtkuhl on October 31, 2006

Since it is Halloween you may find this following instructional video helpful in case you get in the middle of a catastrophic Zombie Attack.

Tags: ,

{ 0 comments }

Google Acquires Jotspot

by Andy Brudtkuhl on October 31, 2006

Google has officially bought JotSpot, a leader in Web 2.0 productivity and collaboration platforms.

From JotSpot’s Website:

Why is Google acquiring JotSpot?

Google shares JotSpot’s vision for helping people collaborate, share and work together online. JotSpot’s team and technology are a strong fit with existing Google products like Google Docs & Spreadsheets, Google Apps for Your Domain and Google Groups.

You can find out more yourself here. The terms of the deal are undisclosed so I doubt we’ll ever find out, unless it is leaked.

What does this mean for Google? The addition of several great applications to add to their productivity platform (Google Docs, Spreadsheets, Mail, etc).

If you are unfamiliar with JotSpot, their main product is a wiki – but not the traditional wiki. Their platform allows users to “to create rich web-based spreadsheets, calendars, documents and photo galleries”. It is customizable and allows you to create some of your own applications on the fly. It is a great tool. I have used it and found it quite easy to use and it is a very nice application. If Google integrates it properly it is a major move for them into the web based office productivity suite.

Excellent acquisition for Google.

View the Jotspot demo:

tags: , ,

{ 0 comments }

Yahoo Publisher Network

by Andy Brudtkuhl on October 30, 2006

As I noted, Yahoo! is in the content production business and continues to perpetuate my theory after announcing Yahoo! Publisher Network. The Publisher Network provides you many tools to help enhance your website, including:

They’ve revamped their Search Marketing efforts and launched a couple great blogs – YPN and Yahoo! Search Marketing.

I love the direction Yahoo! is taking which gives them a giant footprint in Web 2.0 and social media.

{ 0 comments }

IE Team sends cake to Firefox Team – Congrats!

by Andy Brudtkuhl on October 26, 2006

So the Internet Explorer team sent a cake to the Mozilla team congratulating them on their release of Firefox 2 which launched about a week after Microsoft launched IE 7.

Humorous. Surprised it didn’t say ‘Ha, Ha We beat you!’

Oh well, we all know which is the better browser.

I’ve been using both since their launch dates. What’s the differentiation factor? Plugins, Plugins, Plugins. Firefox has an active developer community that serves to enhance their product with value-added plugins such as the Gmail Notifier and Web Developer Toolbar, etc, etc, etc.

Microsoft refuses to embrace community development for value added projects. C’mon you can play like your open source can’t you? I don’t want your source code … I want to be able to build an application to run on my XBOX 360 or Zune.

Sure, IE 7 has the integrated feed aggregator which is much better than Firefox’s RSS Live Bookmark implementation. But I’m willing to bet the FF team realizes that the future of syndication will be a web service and not through a desktop application. That’s pretty obvious to me and the reason I believe IE 7 will NOT take RSS mainstream.

Thanks to Jeremy for pointing this out.

{ 3 comments }