No they were not setting standards. They were in fact breaking them. Their own standards were not disclosed, forcing competitors to actually have to reverse engineer them in order to try to have a chance at compatibility.
The whole reason for the lack of uniformity was Microsoft fucking with the standards!
Secondly, the competitors did not have a significant market share.
Thirdly, it’s funny that you mention in the context of a developer, given that they all complain mightily, even to this day, about having to support the festering pile of IE versions still around.
Still, this won’t stop you telling, so you go do your thing elsewhere please.
Sure, just ignore the context I provided and substitute it for your own, doesn’t change they were the market maker and the primary development platform for web with IE, I know this because I’ve probably been a developer longer than you’ve been alive, and had to create work arounds for compatability with netscape for those 8 years I mentioned.
What do you mean the competitors didn’t have market share, in '98 netscape was 41.5% of all browsers to IE’s 48.3%. You don’t even know what you’re talking about.
Your idealistic hard on with Microsoft’ s tactics doesn’t change the reality that they became market leader, or that they were the ones using that influence to drive standards. Saying the standards weren’t known is also bullshit because we were developing on those standards. So yes, Microsoft was market leader and Microsoft was calling the shots for website development standards, because they had market share whether you like how they got there or not, it doesn’t change this objective fact.
Funny how you want to engage in part of a conversation and then instead of wanting to hear a rebuttal you just want me to go away so you can think happy ignorant thoughts. Why did you bother responding?
No they were not setting standards. They were in fact breaking them. Their own standards were not disclosed, forcing competitors to actually have to reverse engineer them in order to try to have a chance at compatibility. The whole reason for the lack of uniformity was Microsoft fucking with the standards!
Secondly, the competitors did not have a significant market share. Thirdly, it’s funny that you mention in the context of a developer, given that they all complain mightily, even to this day, about having to support the festering pile of IE versions still around. Still, this won’t stop you telling, so you go do your thing elsewhere please.
Sure, just ignore the context I provided and substitute it for your own, doesn’t change they were the market maker and the primary development platform for web with IE, I know this because I’ve probably been a developer longer than you’ve been alive, and had to create work arounds for compatability with netscape for those 8 years I mentioned.
What do you mean the competitors didn’t have market share, in '98 netscape was 41.5% of all browsers to IE’s 48.3%. You don’t even know what you’re talking about.
Your idealistic hard on with Microsoft’ s tactics doesn’t change the reality that they became market leader, or that they were the ones using that influence to drive standards. Saying the standards weren’t known is also bullshit because we were developing on those standards. So yes, Microsoft was market leader and Microsoft was calling the shots for website development standards, because they had market share whether you like how they got there or not, it doesn’t change this objective fact.
Funny how you want to engage in part of a conversation and then instead of wanting to hear a rebuttal you just want me to go away so you can think happy ignorant thoughts. Why did you bother responding?