Posted by John Lampard on Wednesday, 5 March, 2008 to the technology subset
Microsoft’s Interoperability Principles and IE8
Microsoft has decided to abandon the “controversial” version targeting feature in Internet Explorer 8.
We’ve decided that IE8 will, by default, interpret web content in the most standards compliant way it can. This decision is a change from what we’ve posted previously.
Short and to the point. Needless to say standardistas are delighted, [...]

Posted by John Lampard on Thursday, 28 February, 2008 to the technology subset
Microsoft to launch beta of Internet Explorer 8
After all the talk of IE8’s version targeting feature, web developers will soon be able to see it in action, with the pending release of the Internet Explorer 8 beta.
Microsoft executives are expected to reveal further details about the browser’s features at the software maker’s upcoming Mix conference [...]

Posted by John Lampard on Thursday, 21 February, 2008 to the technology subset
Version Targeting: Threat or Menace?
Jeffrey Zeldman on enlightened developers verses unenlightened developers, Internet Explorer 6 verses Internet Explorer 7, and the case for Version Targeting in Internet Explorer 8.
When IE’s compliance leaped forward with IE7, at least temporarily satisfying Microsoft’s first customer group, the badly authored sites created by the second customer group stopped working [...]

Posted by John Lampard on Tuesday, 5 February, 2008 to the technology subset
Fear and Loathing in Standardsville: The IE8 Opt-in Debate
If you’re fed up with all the talk about the new version targeting “feature” of Internet Explorer 8… I’d say get used to it. Perhaps you’d prefer to read about the Microsoft Yahoo! merger instead?
In other words, I think we’ll be hearing a LOT more about [...]

Posted by John Lampard on Thursday, 24 January, 2008 to the technology subset
Standards mode is the new quirks mode.
Apologies to those of disassociated’s readers who are wondering what the hell “version targeting”, “doctype switching”, (and not to mention “browser sniffing”) is all about, and why anyone cares in the first place.
I’m still trying to get my head around the concept, and, needless to say, have been doing [...]

Posted by John Lampard on Thursday, 24 January, 2008 to the technology subset
In defense of version targeting.
Jeffrey Zeldman’s thoughts on the version targeting debate:
Today too many sites aren’t semantic, don’t validate, and aren’t designed to specs of the W3C. Idealists think we can change this by “forcing” ignorant developers to get wisdom about web standards. Idealists hope, if sites suddenly display poorly in IE, the developers will [...]

Posted by John Lampard on Thursday, 24 January, 2008 to the technology subset
From Switches to Targets: A Standardista’s Journey.
Eric Meyer, also writing at A List Apart, is not in favour of Internet Explorer 8’s version targeting feature:
As I read through Aaron Gustafson’s Beyond DOCTYPE: Web Standards, Forward Compatibility, and IE8, my immediate gut reaction was deeply negative. The version-targeting mechanism Aaron described was just wrong, completely backwards, [...]

Posted by John Lampard on Thursday, 24 January, 2008 to the technology subset
Beyond DOCTYPE: Web Standards, Forward Compatibility, and IE8.
Aaron Gustafson on the merits of the “doctype switcher” feature of the upcoming Internet Explorer 8:
For many years, we designers and developers have been yearning for a way to reliably deploy our websites. In addition to the headaches of writing cross-platform styles and scripts, we’ve had to deal [...]
