dorayme wrote:
> In article<jf2s8c$8gm$
1...@dont-email.me>,
> "Jonathan N. Little"<
lws...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> ...
>>
>> In these VM and VB sessions I only have XP installed with IE6. It gives
>> me true IE6 results because it is truly IE6 and not a standalone with
>> MultiplyIEs. I have run MultiplyIEs back when I was running XP, but it
>> takes some registry hacking to enable correct conditional comments
>> parsing when running multiply versions.
>>
>>
>
> ...
>
> dorayme:
>>>
>>> I should fish out my XP install DVD and maybe check to see if I can
>>> make another VM. If it has 7 or 8 on, is it simple to get rid of it and
>>> get 6, I really have no clue on this sort of thing on Windows? Are
>>> there not secret goings on between the IE that gets installed and the
>>> sytem itself and would these not have to be weeded out if one
>>> installed an earlier application?
>>
>>
>> It is not easy but you can uninstall IE7|8 and reinstall IE6. I did it
>> once when IE7 got borked...It was tricky. I installed my VM XP using my
>> Retail XP Pro disk from my previous computer build that I retired when
>> I built this one. It is XP at SP1 which come with IE at version 6. If
>> you installed yours from a later patch level, or from an image then you
>> may not have the rollback points to remove IE 7& 8. You have to use IE
>> remover utilities, Google can help and then you have to have a IE6
>> install ready.
>
> I assume that in VirtualBox one can install two XPs as separate
> virtual machines, maybe one that is updated to the latest IE8 and one
> left at 6.
2, 3, 4 or as many as you wish limited by your disk space. At a min of
10 GB apiece most of us have enough room for a couple. I was luck to get
a couple of 1TB drives dirt cheap before Thailand flooded.
>
> Thanks for the idea of "remover utilities", I will look one day.
Well because IE is really an OS component and not just a web browser
downgrading can really compromise the "stability"* of Windows. I would
suggests the simplest and most dependable way is just reserve 10GB and
make another VB virtual machine image and install XP without upgrading IE.
*offer of the straight-line for all the jokes about Windows BSODs...
> Really out of my skill range all this stuff with Windows. btw, I have
> changed my mind about persuading you to come over to Macs, you are too
> valuable to me just where you are!<g>
No worry, cuz it ain't going to happen. I chafe now with MS proprietary
lock-in so I am certainly not going to voluntary don the Mac
straitjacket. And as a starving-artist cannot afford the Mac-tax just to
sport the Apple on the hardware. Functionality is the most important
thing to me in a computer not the "shiny". When Redmond gets in my way I
go to Tux and get my *nix without handcuffs. And I don't have to buy new
hardware. Sorry.
>
> I can get by a bit - the multiple IE being useful - as it is by
> knowing or guessing in a conscious way what styles IE6 needs, using a
> complete CSS sheet for IE and removing the general sheet altogether
> for testing, no link to it at all, and then fashioning the
> conditionals and checking in browsershot just once and leaving it at
> that.
I think having a VB machine with IE natively at 6 and another with 8 (or
Win7 with 9) where F12 gets to the developers tools to test for 7-9.
>
> Am starting to think more seriously about not bothering with 6 *at
> all* any more but old habits die hard or just putting a notice up with
Same here. If the page is still usable I cannot see adding a fork with
significant code...I want to forget the the days of the "if then elseif
then elseif then elseif elseif then else" procedures!
> a link to how to turn off all styles for a better experience in IE6.
> You can do that, of course, without any other browser seeing such a
> notice - by using a conditional.
>
Nope I just want to avoid the conditionals as I said above. If the
margins are screwed or PNGs are the best option and they "see grey" so
what! All I worry about is the peekaboo and guillotine bugs.