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Well it'd be hard to say if you can, given that it's still being tested internally to make sure that the changes don't break anything. Then again, if it does break anything there's a good chance that the page it breaks on is actually broken. That's what quirks mode is for anyhow, so that we can move forward without worrying about shoddy coding practices and web designers who really don't know what they're doing.
“And, remember: there's no 'I' in 'irony'†~ Merlin Mann
Well given that the marketing would only be directed at Mac users who are likely already using Safari... I highly doubt it has been for that aim, especially given that Dave has always been rather open with changes and such to Safari (as in, this is nothing new).
Now Opera, there's some clever marketing
“And, remember: there's no 'I' in 'irony'†~ Merlin Mann
It's a set of HTML and CSS markup used to test handling of said markup in modern browsers. Some of the test markup is correct, some is incorrect - this is done to check the error handling of said browsers.
Currently no consumer available browser passes the test.
“And, remember: there's no 'I' in 'irony'†~ Merlin Mann
For those interested in the Acid2 patches I can say that I have merged three of them now and just need to fix a few new regressions. For small simple patches like these it takes 1 or 2 hours to merge them. It is still somewhat easier than to redevelop which would take at least a few hours more. Don’t expect all of the patches. First of all the Acid2 test is complete crap. It doesn’t really test any important features and the only thing it caught we couldn’t do was min/max on positioned elements, the rest of the test are just obscure corner cases of error fall-back.
As per eyecandy: I have now installed SuSE ony my box as a boot option, here's my pretty much stock KDE desktop (only changed the wallpaper):
In the second pic you can see pretty mouseover on icon with jumpy icon next to where cursor should have been (Icons jump when you wait for app to launch next to cursor).
That opinion is utter bs and shows a complete lack of understanding of what is being tested. True, some of it is just better error/incorrect markup handling, but to say the whole test is complete crap is ignorant. The problem is that the KHTML developers have been having a fit due to the way Apple feeds changes back to them; they actually have to do some leg work.
“And, remember: there's no 'I' in 'irony'†~ Merlin Mann
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