I was looking at our browser metrics the other day and it's yet to drop below the arbitrary 5% usage figure we use to fully deprecate browser support. We are a public facing site, and not particularly niche.
It's hovering around there, but if a user is still clinging to ie9 it's highly likely they don't have the ability or requirement to upgrade.
When ie9 legacy support drops my biggest headache will be ie10's squiffy flexbox support.
Having to support ie10 isn't the worst thing in the world. I was surprised when it was released because it was the first time I had ever marked up a page and it worked across all 4 browsers almost pixel perfect without any hacks or tweaks.
You should only really need to worry about IE10 if you have users on Windows Server 2012 baseline, whom should have likely already upgraded to R2 or more recent. Lifecycle support jumps to 11 on most OSes, yay!
I was looking at our browser metrics the other day and it's yet to drop below the arbitrary 5% usage figure we use to fully deprecate browser support. We are a public facing site, and not particularly niche.
It's hovering around there, but if a user is still clinging to ie9 it's highly likely they don't have the ability or requirement to upgrade.
When ie9 legacy support drops my biggest headache will be ie10's squiffy flexbox support.