Echo JS 0.11.0

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gotofritz 2989 days ago. link parent 4 points
Sadly in the corporate world it doesn't work like that. In finance and banking, which are audiences likely to use graphs, you can find a lot of obsolete browsers.

Replies

MaxArt 2987 days ago. link 1 point
My point still stands. The problem is with commissioners who don't understand that keeping your software outdated leads only to sub-optimal experience and/or extended development times.
Installing Chrome or Firefox beside IE6 (if they *really* want to use some legacy ActiveX web app) is free, feasible, fast and just a one-time investment for the administrators.
This is why we, as developers, should try to convince them.
gotofritz 2987 days ago. link 1 point
You obviously have no experience of these environments. It's simply not feasible in certain organisations where IT is very tight and ultra conservative and FE developers are well at the bottom of the food chain.
MaxArt 2986 days ago. link 1 point
I actually had plenty of experience with that type of clients, sadly. I've never gone back to IE6 fortunately, but I have with IE7, and that felt terribly outdated right back then.
Oh, sure, Microsoft was still releasing security patches. They could hide behind that. But now it doesn't, and keeping your software outdated, in the bliss of a false sense of security, is plain stupid.
The point is: stop working for them. You already know that you're not going to get anything good from such clients, and you'll find yourself regretting of not having asked for more money.