language97
05-27-2011, 05:01 PM
Update: A number of people have published in or commented on other websites they believe Microsoft continues to be serving distinct versions of its homepage to various browsers simply because of variations in header/footer variations, or hovers not working inside the left-side navigation in non-IE browsers.
As far as I can tell,Windows 7 Professional Sale (http://www.key-office-2010.eu/windows-7-key), I still only see a single edition of each the HTML and CSS getting served to all browsers. The header and footer use a proprietary gradient transformation to build the blue-to-white gradients that fails in non-IE browsers:
filter:progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.Gradient( )
And each and every of the left-side navigation hyperlinks are developed by badly-nested HTML:
<a href=""><p>Windows</p></a>
… which IE/Win doesn’t care about,office 2007 key (http://www.key-office-2010.co.uk/office-2007-key), so the hover properties work there. But all other browsers correctly recognize the illegal nesting,windows 7 Enterprise x86 (http://www.key-office-2010.co.uk/windows-7-key), and seem to cancel out any hover or active link states.
So,microsoft office 2010 sale (http://www.key-office-2010.co.uk/), nonetheless only one particular edition getting served. That’s good. It’s just that this one particular model is behaving differently in each and every browser. That’s not necessary. With some fixes,Windows 7 Enterprise Sale (http://www.windows732bitkey.net/), the page could render much more consistently in every modern browser (including IE5.0/Win).
As far as I can tell,Windows 7 Professional Sale (http://www.key-office-2010.eu/windows-7-key), I still only see a single edition of each the HTML and CSS getting served to all browsers. The header and footer use a proprietary gradient transformation to build the blue-to-white gradients that fails in non-IE browsers:
filter:progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.Gradient( )
And each and every of the left-side navigation hyperlinks are developed by badly-nested HTML:
<a href=""><p>Windows</p></a>
… which IE/Win doesn’t care about,office 2007 key (http://www.key-office-2010.co.uk/office-2007-key), so the hover properties work there. But all other browsers correctly recognize the illegal nesting,windows 7 Enterprise x86 (http://www.key-office-2010.co.uk/windows-7-key), and seem to cancel out any hover or active link states.
So,microsoft office 2010 sale (http://www.key-office-2010.co.uk/), nonetheless only one particular edition getting served. That’s good. It’s just that this one particular model is behaving differently in each and every browser. That’s not necessary. With some fixes,Windows 7 Enterprise Sale (http://www.windows732bitkey.net/), the page could render much more consistently in every modern browser (including IE5.0/Win).