Friday 9 October 2009

Mac Wireless

Well, that's interesting.


I upgraded to Snow Leopard, and everything was hunky dory. Probably because I had tied down any changes to the network by requiring an admin to do it (I'm the only one who uses the machine, but still, good practise. If annoying when you're installing stuff you want).


Then I moved house, and everything went haywire.


Symptoms:
- Unable to connect to a new network
- Unable to turn Airport off
- Unable to connect to old networks


That's all when logged into the Admin account. Anyway, the fix I found was here at technipages. I was trying to do something similar, but didn't know you could add a new location. I was sure it was something in the software, because when I logged into Windows XP in my bootcamp it did connect. 


Very weird, but all sorted. Now to go to a warm room, away from the router room (which is freezing!)

Wednesday 7 October 2009

Browser stats

For a while now, I've been talking about how IE6 is not needed support, and that IE7 is also useless.


Unfortunately, I was wrong. I've spent a bit of time doing some research on this, mainly through 2 sites. First up was w3schools.


As you can see, Firefox was unsurprisingly the top browser for visitors to the site. It's bleeding market share, probably to Chrome and Safari at a guess. Since this post is based on the fact I was wrong with an earlier guess ... take that with a grain of salt. Chrome and Safari are both increasing, something which I'm sure I've contributed to. But IE7 is still the top IE browser?? I didn't see that coming, especially on what is a 'tech' site. And 12% of all visitors STILL use IE6??? No wonder you need help with programming ....


Next, I went to statcounter. You need to dig down to find information, as the first page is pretty simple. What it does do, though, is show that IE6 and IE7 are not dying any time soon. Windows 7 may change that, but personally I doubt it. 


My favourite stat though, was mobile OS. The iphone is not number 1, which isn't too surprising when you know how many 'smart' phones there are out there running rival OSs. 


Anyway, the moral of the story is a) Aussie IE8 users will overtake IE7 this month and b) You still need to provide support for IE6 and IE7. For the rest of 2009 anyway. We'll see what the new year brings!