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by Yoric
1173 days ago
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FWIW, that's a pretty standard behavior for Chrome teams) and, as far as I understand, related to how they are evaluated within Google. More spec proposals == good for your career. Shipping a feature (even if it's non-standard) == good for your career. Ensuring standard-compatibility == noop. Source: I used to be a browser dev annoyed by how Chrome kept shipping non-standard features. |
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As long as Chrome has > 80% market share, the more non-standard features the ship, the more they cement their position.
Same as IE6, which was intentionally non-standards. Sites would be designed to work in IE, and would not work on Netscape.
Considering how much spying and how much lock-in Chrome provides for Google, anything that makes devs design for Chrome only is a huge advantage.