|
|
|
|
|
by saurik
4509 days ago
|
|
This is a rewrite of history: if you actually read the material published at the time, Netscape ignored the standards (even actively scoffing at them), and Microsoft's IE was seen as the white knight that actually cared enough to be on the mailing list with the standards body, working on their DTDs in public. Now, as everyone is always "citation needed" on this, as maintaining this myth is a much stronger goal for most people than doing even minimal backing research, here are some places I've talked about this before in more detail, the second link containing a very large number of citations if you go through to the bottom of the thread. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5216141 https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5716787 Your comment about VBScript is silly, given that JavaScript was also non-standard Netscape-specific Java-laden ludicrousness that also "broke the web" (script elements were implemented in a way that required special hacks to an HTML parser to even parse due to nested < having a different meaning, and done without any requirement for backwards-compatibility to ones that would see the content as part of the document). It was only due to Microsoft's JScript (ehich went hand-in-hand with VBScript and ActiveX in the same way JavaScript worked with Java as "LiveScript"
in Netscape) that ECMAScript got standardized at all. Seriously: I simply don't understand why everyone perpetuates this madness when you can't substantiate any of it if you look at the actual history... every comment bashing IE always repeats this stuff, so everyone thinks of it as gospel truth, but it really is all just myth at this point: "citation needed". |
|
My point is not "Netscape rules, Microsoft drools." My point is that implementing new ideas that haven't been fully standardized — as both Microsoft and Netscape did — was never really the big problem. The problem with IE that made people come to hate it was that Microsoft broke the standards, left them broken for years and years and refused to implement anything new. Netscape was corpsified by the time this really came to a head, so I don't know what they have to do with anything. The alternatives I brought up were the later browsers like Firefox and Safari that got tired of waiting and started implementing new things and slowly eroding IE's marketshare.