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Flygger19817yPretending a problem doesn't exist is no way near a way of solving it; it's more like pretending a traffic light is not red by wearing a blindfold...
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hjk10157317y@Flygger as IE is the problem(and closed source) removing it is as close to solution as it gets. If you have a way to permanently remove IE and it's offspring from this universe please let us know. This community is filled with people that benefit greatly from your findings 😁
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Flygger19817y@hjk101 If you think a bug in one or more of the applications used to present what you created is not your problem and you can solve it by just removing whatever third party application is not working for you, you show your problem solving skills to be limited to closing your eyes and pretending the problem doesn't exist.
If the specs clearly state that what you're building isn't required to run on IE10- it's not a problem in the first place, if not it's definitely your problem and needs to be solved.
And for an old, simple, and known bug like this one, there will be plenty of workarounds readily available ;) -
hjk10157317y@Flygger I see your concern and agree that a bug, especially one with workarounds, is not grounds for abolishing an application.
However one can waist time on workarounds for a technology that is out of date, never seems to catch up (edge evergreen. It's just as silly as IE 9 the browser that does not suck and superior in HTML5 support) and full of bugs. Or one can simply use another browser as a workaround. A web browser is not something unique. There are far better alternatives. Let's not waist more time on it shall we. -
Flygger19817y@hjk101 I agree with you most of the way, but as far as I understood from OP's image the problem was not that "things look weird when I use IE10 for something" but rather "a bug makes background images flicker in IE10" — and thus the solution would hardly ever be a change of client software.
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