Browsers Working on Church Site

Last week, I placed an order though ldscatalog.com using Firefox and it worked perfectly. Previously this year, using Firefox ended up in several errors, despite it working fine in the fall.

I decided that it was time to send a friendly email to tech support letting them know my problems were gone. Here is their response:

At the present time, we only officially support Internet Explorer 5.0+; but we are glad that other browsers are functioning better at this website.

No wonder they had the problems they did. They’re still of the mindset that since it works in IE and not other browsers, then the other browsers must not be functioning well.

In actuality, it was the website, not the browsers, that was functioning poorly. After all, I was using the same browser in the fall, the winter and the spring. That variable did not change.

Surely, in 2005, technology exits where someone can create an e-commerce site that works in any browser on any system.

3 thoughts on “Browsers Working on Church Site

  1. Kim,

    Do you understand that some of us do not speak a foreign language? I don’t want to claim ignorance _ but when I browse it is the only time I can recollect being a browser. :)

  2. Seems like a non-issue to me. The Church sites have always worked well with Microsoft IE as well as Netscape, Opera and Foxfire/Mozella. A few tweaks might be needed to the settings page of some browsers; e.g., Opera’s “Server Settings”, etc. (I have not tried Netscape’s recent versions.)

    I’ve used several browsers with the ward sites, lds.org, ldscatalog.com, familysearch.com, etc. All with success.

    You’ll never find “the universal browser” that works with every site in the WWW world. A nice idea, but an idea that is will always be just that…a good idea that is always a few revisions away. The same is true of web sites. No site can be coded to insure it will work with every browser and every browser’s settings

    Roger

  3. “The Church sites have always worked well with Microsoft IE as well as Netscape, Opera and Foxfire/Mozella (sic)”

    Except, at least, for the first four months of this year when anyone using a non-IE browser could not place an order on ldscatalog.com.

    “No site can be coded to insure it will work with every browser and every browser’s settings”

    Depends on what you mean by ‘work’. Every site I build works in every browser in every situation (even cellphones) in that the content is made available and the site is easily navigable. Do they look the same in every browser in every situation? No. But I do not consider aesthetics to be exclusively dependent on how something functions.

Comments are closed.