The solution referenced here is a style sheet that references a script library that makes use of Microsoft DHTML behaviors. These behaviors are used to correct problems with IE's standards support in IE 5, 5.5 and 6 for Windows. A detailed description of what "IE7" does is available from the IE7 homepage at
http://dean.edwards.name/ie7. Dean Edwards, the creator of IE7 also hosts a Q/A forum at
https://sourceforge.net/forum/forum.php?forum_id=379297.
Its important that you understand that IE7 isn't the next major version of Microsoft's browser but a collection of behaviors that you include in a web document that corrects IE's standards support. Since this is a client-side scripting solution, the end-user has nothing to upgrade or install. Its named IE7 because it includes some of the functionality that everyone hopes will be in the next major version of IE.
Anyone wanting to follow along with the IE team's plans or progress on the /real/ next version of IE should have a look at the following URLs...
http://blogs.msdn.com/ie/
http://channel9.msdn.com/wiki/defaul...plorerFeedback
It seems Microsoft may finally be listening to everyone's complaining about IE being such a crappy, outdated browser!
Regards,
Rich
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The Spicy Peanut Project
http://www.spicypeanut.net
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