The internet site browser wars have developed into a full-fledged outcry for compatibility with various web design and development languages. Specially now with
fast internet connections since more people can now fully access the additional functions and features such improvements on various web design and development languages have gone through after years of painstaking development. No wonder the programmers of each internet site browser have gone weary and bruised to the bone! But, nevertheless, I think they're better off today than the lifestyle that they had way back when the word internet was first heard from the mouth of Bill Gates. It was a myth back then, or many people viewed it as something from the fertile mind of either a loon or a genius!
Since I believe we now know which exactly makes up for a bonafide term for the man's ideas, I think we also expect the same from the developers under his name. No, his real name isn't Microsoft. But with Bill Gates, Microsoft and his name are one and the same thing, for without the other, such household names are nothing! Yet, there's this sort of problem regarding the developers of the
Internet Explorer internet site browser being shorthanded when it actually comes to accessibility and compatibility with newly developed design tactics and languages. Such is the case when the comments well within inline styles following the CSS pre-defined rules are set on the pages of an internet site.
You see, if it weren't for the tweaks that were developed by various web developers and designers, the Microsoft Internet Explorer internet site browser would still be regarded as the joker among the pack of internet site browsers growing more and more compatible with most newly developed design techniques and languages. This is because the other internet site browsers understand that the pre-defined CSS rules apply each time comments can be found well within the inline styles of a page on an internet site. But it seems that IE has problems with this easy to understand concept! To think that all IE needs to do is to understand that the comments should be ignored when such is applied to XHTML documents! I don't know what his programmers are doing, but I think they're doing absolutely nothing to answer this problem!