> That's a cute argument, but Microsoft never held a gun to a developer's head and said "use this feature or else!" Neither will Google.
I'd rather not go back to websites that have to specifically say which browser you have to run them in on the homepage. The web needs to be based on standards, not proprietary code.
Standards are two ends of one spectrum, but the code that the article is about is open source, so it's neither proprietary nor standard. It's just a feature in an open source project.
I'd rather not go back to websites that have to specifically say which browser you have to run them in on the homepage. The web needs to be based on standards, not proprietary code.