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Posted by dorayme on 07/21/07 22:11
In article <p4roi.415$Ub7.44@trnddc04>,
"El Kabong" <davelong40@verizon.net> wrote:
> Then as a professional Web designer, trying to make a living designing
> functional, practical Web sites, maybe I should ignore the beta versions and
> stick to working with "released" versions. In fact, why waste time designing
> for browsers that stats show are used by less than 5% of Web visitors? After
> all, when this project is finished, the next one awaits.
You need to distinguish between having a browser to check how
things look and designing for that browser. Once you do make this
distinction and once you do realise that the browser is a Beta,
you use the information smartly as an alert. If something looks
right, fine. You have no worries. If something looks wrong that
does not show up on your normal browsers, and you cannot quickly
see what it is, you then can check against a released version
(ask a Mac person, ask on an ng).
--
dorayme
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