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#1
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Re: what browser do the judges use.
I was a website judge for the SBPLI regional this weekend and I primarily use Firefox. I did break down and used IE for a few sites when it was clear they were not being displayed correctly.
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#2
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Re: what browser do the judges use.
Someone said that almost everyone uses IE. That is certainly not true. Here are some statistics from my team's site. It is true that a majority of people use IE, but a large percentage of people use other browsers.
MS Internet Explorer No 10980 55.2% Firefox No 5860 29.4% Unknown ?2667 13.4% Netscape No 169 0.8% Opera No 96 0.4% and more Last edited by Brandon Martus : 09-04-2006 at 19:53. Reason: removing image |
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#3
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Re: what browser do the judges use.
Quote:
2006 IE7 IE6 IE5 Ffox Moz N O March 0.6% 58.8% 5.3% 24.5% 2.4% 0.5% 1.5% February0.5% 59.5% 5.7% 25.1% 2.9% 0.4% 1.5% January 0.2% 60.3% 5.5% 25.0% 3.1% 0.5% 1.6% And as you can see, Most everybody DOES use internet explorer... XP is the most popular operating system, and because of that, every computer-illiterate person who gets a computer uses it's default browser: Internet Explorer. There is absolutely no reason for people not to use IE, especially when vista comes out with 7. EDIT Rats... the table didn't show up... It shows about 63% who use some form of IE and 25% who use FF. Last edited by Brandon Martus : 09-04-2006 at 19:55. |
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#4
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Re: what browser do the judges use.
Quote:
Last edited by Brandon Martus : 09-04-2006 at 19:55. |
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#5
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Re: what browser do the judges use.
Quote:
It should be pretty clear that the target audience for a good FIRST-related site (as in, website award material) is the general public, seeing as section 9.7 definitively articulates the need for features that serve to promote FIRST and the team to outsiders. So I ask, if you're catering to outsiders, why are you primarily concerned with the recent traffic on your site? That reflects the people who have already been reached, not the people to whom you are reaching. Additionally, I have a few questions about your methodology. Are you counting page loads, unique hits, or something else? Of these, are a large proportion due to the developers themselves—such as when you reload a page to test a code change? Do you use Firefox in this manner? I hope that you can appreciate how this sort of thing can easily bias your data. In general, FIRST teams must design their sites to support recent versions of IE, because among the general public, that is still the most popular choice. Supporting Firefox, Safari, etc. are of course good ideas as well, but any site which is not fully operable under IE is not worthy of recognition by FIRST, because its inoperability negates any merits that it might have under the various categories of assessment. The team's site isn't the place to be making a political statement regarding your opinion of Microsoft, or of the Mozilla Foundation, or any other entity—at least not if you value winning a website award. And with regard to the linked image from robot180, that certificate error (whatever the reason—maybe your certificate provider isn't on Microsoft's most up-to-date list, maybe you issued it yourself, maybe there's something wrong with my browser) surely isn't a good omen. These are the little things that annoy users, and judges; fix them! Last edited by Brandon Martus : 09-04-2006 at 19:55. |
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#6
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Re: what browser do the judges use.
There's no two ways about it, IE holds more than two thirds of the market share (depending on your definintion). Of course, we're not counting number of users that positively choose to use IE, because I suspect that number is rather low. But we must remember that the average IE demographic is much older and drastically less technically-inclined. This means that they not only use the Web less, but are less likely to go to one of the websites that counts market share when they do in fact use the Web (I'm pretty sure WebMD and the American Geriatrics Society don't contribute to the count). Remember also that unmodified IE6 and lower do not use tabbed browsing (like Mozilla and most others) or MDI (like Opera), and thus IE users' browsing habits and methods are both less efficient and use less bandwidth; the simple fact that we have tabs on our browsers makes us compuslively middle-click every other link and load it in parallel (hit), even if we don't read it at all, whereas IE users load in series and have linear histories that take them wherever the pages lead them. While most market share counters aren't counting individual page views at all, this still means that more unique tabbed browser visitors will set them off.
Now, I'm not going to dispute the high numbers from Firefox you're all getting in your website's stats, because it's clear that technically-savvy FIRST students are more likely use Firefox. You can make both a sociological correlation here, and also note that it's actively promoted here on CD and indeed among teams. But if you look closely at your stats, I bet you'll notice that there are a lot of hits from Firefox, but that a) many of them are actually you, and b) there is a much lower hits to unique visitor ratio from IE users. Last edited by jonathan lall : 09-04-2006 at 15:27. |
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#7
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Re: what browser do the judges use.
When building my team's website, we encountered differences with things working/showing and not showing in IE, FF, Opera, and Safari.
FF dominates as usual, showing everything correctly, displaying the favicon, and the clickable image map. My suggestion to you: Make it be a visibly functional website in all browsers. When building, constantly check this and work with it. End result- "so what? little extra things don't show/work." But what you have is an operational website that gives useful and aesthetically 'nice' information about your team. One thing that I have seen teams do is put a graphic or something that says "Best viewed in ________" Still-- your main goal should be to get something functional up in all browser types. |
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#8
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Re: what browser do the judges use.
If your CSS is not displaying correctly, why not use a PHP-generated CSS file? Your PHP file can detect the operating system and the browser that the client is using, and generate the correct CSS accordingly. If you then use mod_rewrite to mask the URL to a .css ending, it will be cached by the browsers. Also, put all your non-browser dependent CSS into a CSS file, and use the PHP one to only generate the CSS that is browser specific to reduce the amount of server-side parsing that needs to be done.
The only real time I use this appoach is because of IE (most notably because of its lack of min-width/max-width support). Edit: I hit Submit before I was done by mistake... Anyway, whenever I work on something, I want it to display correctly in all browsers without loss of content or functionality. I will continue to tweak the code until it works. (Right now I am reworking most of the HTML pages on my team's website into PHP ones with better graphics and better browser support). This is a major plus to using PHP instead of HTML to generate your pages: you can generate different code depending on the OS and browser of the clients to ensure that your page looks (and works) equally well in all browsers. Be considerate to those who use Firefox, Opera, or Safari. Make your website one-hundred percent compatible in any browser. Quote:
I usually use 800x600 as a starting point - everything should be viewable in 800x600 screens without needing to scroll sideways. From there, I like to use a automatic resizing layout that will match the width of your browser screen up to a point (such as 1280px wide). This way, people in any screen resolution between 800px and 1280px widths (this will normally be about 95% of all traffic to your website) will be able to view your website. And by having the content max out at 1280px width, it makes the site still readible in those incredibly high resolution screens. Yes, it does take more work to get everything to display correctly as it automagically resizes itself to match the browser window width, but in the end it behaves more "fluid" and displays like the user would want. (If a user has a browser window maximized with a 1024px resolution screen, they want to view the websites at a 1024px resolution. Last edited by artdutra04 : 10-04-2006 at 00:55. |
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#9
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Re: what browser do the judges use.
I would guess IE. I have seen sites which render properly ONLY in IE win the website award.
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