37 Signals phasing out IE6 support

I hadn’t seen the announcement when I wrote about my suggestion for helping IE6 out of the door, but it seems that 37 Signals have decided the same thing.

Their announcement made in July, was clarified yesterday to state:

We will not intentionally break IE 6 compatibility, but we will also not invest significant time or resources into making sure we are backward compatible with IE 6 after October 1, 2008.

The IE6 millstone is going to weight much heavier for web application developers than it does for designers in that there are more than just aesthetic issues at stake as explained here:

IE 6 is a last-generation browser. This means that IE 6 can’t provide the same web experience that modern browsers can. Continued support of IE 6 means that we can’t optimize our interfaces or provide an enhanced customer experience in our apps. Supporting IE 6 means slower progress, less progress, and, in some places, no progress. We want to make sure the experience is the best it can be for the vast majority of our customers, and continuing to support IE 6 holds us back.

It’s this sort of decisive action which will help to push browser usage forwards. The more effort put into supporting older browsers – the longer they will take to fall out of common usage.

4 Responses

  1. Danny says:

    This is good news. I’m sitting here trying to make an XHR button work in IE6. It works in every other browser, but unfortunately everyone else in my company uses IE6 :(

    IE6 is to web development what mosquitos are to summer holidays.

  2. Danny says:

    PS You should put a couple of ads on, sometimes people like clicking stuff. :)

  3. Dave says:

    You’ve given me an idea there, I don’t run this blog for profit and I used to run ads but it was never a very productive enterprise. I might start running free ads for friends. I know quite a few start-ups from my recent trip to Web 2.0 Expo and I’m sure they wouldn’t turn down a free banner placement.

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  1. [...] Signals also announced that they would no longer actively support IE6, a step in the right direction but it doesn’t actively encourage users to change their [...]

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