Why Upgrade Internet Explorer 6 to 7?

CSS, Design Trends, General, SEO, Website Design, Website Development
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Internet Explorer 6 (IE6) is celebrating its 8th birthday this year. Now this is old in terms of software.

IE6 doesn’t support Transparency of PNG’s, some CSS. The Internet has grown considerably since the release of IE6 in 2001. Standards have become a priority for most designers out there, and all IE6 does is hinder the progress of design and development in terms of the Interent.

One can easily upgrade to IE7 or IE8 from Microsofts website.
Or change to a more user friendly and likely to show your website the way you want it to be such as Firefox.
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Deprecated HTML

(X)HTML, Design Trends, General, Website Development
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Several HTML tags have become deprecated over the years, in other words they are considered old and outdated and no longer used, as there are better ways to achieve the same effect. I have compiled a list of the deprecated elements below and an alternative method to achieve the same effect.
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Microsoft Internet Explorer Only HTML and CSS

(X)HTML, CSS, General, Website Design, Website Development
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I have noticed over the past few years that many people don’t seem to realise that some HTML and CSS tags only work in Internet Explorer (IE). This also tells me that they don’t test there websites in other browsers such as the ever popular Firefox.
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Bad Website Design Practices

General, SEO, Website Design, Website Development
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This is a list of bad website design practices that I have compiled together. Many designers still seem to make these mistakes to this day.

  1. Flash, Image or Enter Here Splash pages. For the most part most search engines won’t find anything to index on this page and will ignore it as they don’t have any or very minimal text. There is a time and place for flash, but it isn’t 1999 anymore when Splash and Flash Intro Pages were the main trend. Splash pages don’t serve any purpose to customers, they just want information. Most of the people who come to the website will probably not waste their time watching it and move straight onto the information.
  2. Not testing to see that your website works in more than one browser. Test your website in multiple browsers not only e.g. Internet Explorer, test it in other browsers as well e.g. Firefox, Safari, Google Chrome, etc.
  3. Don’t use scrolling DIV’s. That is what the browser scrollbar is there for. It also becomes annoying when you get 2 scrollbars, namely the DIV’s and the browsers and they start “fighting” with one another when you use the mouse scroll wheel.
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Freelance Website Goes Live!

General
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Finally, the looooong wait is over. Today I uploaded the latest version of my Freelance Website, The Creative Dot.

I hope that you will all enjoy the fresh new look, after all this time.

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