ANSWERS: 3
  • Web browsers are constantly being updated. *** Older browsers, as they lose number of users, over time become less and less worthwhile for companies to spend money making their web sites compatible. Consider, for example, Microsoft Internet Explorer (IE). At one time it had at least tens of millions of users in the U.S. It was the #1 browser. So: if you wanted those tens of millions of people to be able to use your web site, you had to make sure that you designed your web site to work with IE (and believe me, it was a pain for us one-dog shows, and surely it was very expensive for major corporations). Now IE has about 1% of the US browser market share. It's no longer worth the expense (for a large web developer or corporation) or the pain (for a small-time web developer) to design a web site so that it works with IE when there are so many other - more up-to-date, much more widely used - browsers available that WILL work with the not-tailored-to-IE web site.
    • DancesWithWolves
      Thanks for your comments
  • Do you have any idea how anything works? Why do people that say did you hear or I hear make up lies?
    • DancesWithWolves
      Thanks for your comments
  • Perhaps. So far, newer technologies tend to offer better performance, keeping us up-to-date with the newest versions of each system.
    • DancesWithWolves
      Thanks for your comments

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