Your browser is not compatible with www.suntrustmortgage.com at this time.Instead of taking SunTrust's advice, I eliminated them from consideration as a mortgage lender. My income, while not huge, is more than adequate to cover the mortgage I'm seeking, and I pay my bills on time so my credit is pretty good. There are hundreds of lenders who would like my business. If SunTrust doesn't want me, no problem; I'm already pre-approved by several other lenders.
If you are using Netscape 6.x, Netscape has chosen to alter their communication standards resulting in this incompatibility. In the interim, we recommend you use one of the following browsers:If you are using AOL or Internet Explorer 4.5 on a Macintosh, we recommend you download and utilize Internet Explorer 5.0 to optimize your experience on our site.
- Netscape (4.08 ? 4.77)
- Internet Explorer (4.0 or higher)
- AOL (4.0 or higher)
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"...you just go on Mozilla-only...."
Did you bother to RTFA, or are you just trolling? Your second paragraph---in complete contrast to your first---makes the author's point. Are you dissociative?
The author is specifically NOT tryng to get folk to abandon MSIE for Firefox/Moz, or whatever. He is trying to get content providers to write to standards, which includes stylesheets to render sites not only for browsers, but cels, PDA's and what-have-you. Even Braille and audible output.
Check out the HTML and CSS standards sonmetime. You might learn something, fan-bot.
Best,
Mal the Elder
Myself, I've made my sites conform to HTML4 + CSS since 1997 and they still look good, most have improved since browsers provide better CSS support these days.
Another way to look at the problem is to ask these fools, "how would you like to increase your potential market by 5 - 20 % ?" Yes? Then support standards (i.e. <A HREF="http://www.w3.org/TR/html401" title="w3.org">HTML</a w3.org> for structure and <A HREF="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-CSS2" title="w3.org">CSS</a w3.org> for layout/formatting) and <A HREF="http://validator.w3.org/" title="w3.org">validate your pages</a w3.org>. Not only will they reach more people now, but will continue to do so for longer into the future.
The trend is already underway and growing.
<A HREF="http://shire.homeip.net/cgi-bin/awstats.pl?config=shire.homeip.net" title="homeip.net">AWStats at Shire</a homeip.net>
This seems to be a case of deliberate bad design
(targeting Mozilla for a denial) rather than
favoring one particular browser.
B.T.W.: A "perl" script I have that uses "curl" to
extract the web server identification reports that
http://www.manateeedc.com is:
www.manateeedc.com -> HTTP/1.1 : Microsoft-IIS/6.0
The future is mobile
Posted by: Anonymous Coward on September 27, 2004 04:13 PMBoring.
Capable web designer is the one who can offer comparable browsing experiences on both the No1 browser, but also on browsers on cell phones, PDAs, obscure devices & platforms. Surely, some of these browsers don't support the latest and the greatest. But some times, you don't even need the latest and greatest, and you can always strive to minimize the reader's inconvenience.
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