Is Microsoft learning from Web standards mistakes?

 

Summary

Microsoft has learned some very serious lessons when it comes to complying with Web standards. But has the software giant really wised up on its past mistakes?

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Microsoft has learned some very serious lessons when it comes to complying with Web standards after taking heavy criticism from the industry and, more importantly, a beating in the browser market share.

In a video interview with ZDNet Australia last month, Microsoft blogger and group manager of technical community, Frank Arrigo, explained how important it is for the Redmond giant to follow Web standards.

"Standards are important," said Arrigo, who admitted that Microsoft had been guilty of ignoring them in the past. "If you look at IE6, we didn't quite follow all the standards but standards are important ... IE7 as an example is trying to address that."

In July 2003, IE owned more than 90 percent of the browser market and very few companies even bothered testing their Web applications against anything other than Microsoft's (non-standards compliant) browser.

In that position of power, Microsoft announced that IE would no longer be released as a standalone browser and instead would only be available as part of the next desktop operating system--at that time known only by the codename Longhorn, but since released as Windows Vista.

In response to the announcement, analysts such as Gartner's Michael Silver warned that Microsoft's decision was likely to create opportunities for alternative browsers.

"People will think, 'are the applications I'm writing for the browser-agnostic, or are they IE applications--which makes them Windows applications?' If I want an application to run on a Linux desktop or Macintosh desktop, maybe the way to do that is to ensure it runs on Mozilla, Safari and the other main browsers," Silver said.

This was also the view of James Governor, an analyst at RedMonk. Governor said: "The bottom line is that consumer-facing Web sites have been remiss in supporting the latest standards, and unresponsive to the needs of many users. It's time to reassess that approach, and Microsoft's decision is a good spur to doing just that."

Four years on, Microsoft still has the dominant browser, but its last year market share has plummeted. Firefox and Opera, which are standards compliant, have made amazing progress and Apple is also hoping to have an impact with it Windows-based Safari offering.

Microsoft is now facing a new challenge--in the world of Web 2.0, the company's Expression Web design tools, which along with Silverlight, have been touted by some as potential "Adobe Flash Killers".

However, this time around Microsoft is preaching the use of standards.

At Remix, Microsoft's Arrigo said: "Expression Web is about being a standards-compliant tool because we want to make sure our tools are used by people that are embracing the standards".

When asked if it could be a "Flash killer", he said: "At the end of the day, the customers are going to decide. People who are making applications are going to make a decision. At least we have got something in this genre now".

It seems that Microsoft has learned a very big lesson and this time, it will be the quality of the software rather than an attempted abuse of market power that will decide the winner.

Talkback

As long as SilverLight is Windows only it can be nowhere close to a flash killer.

What_Nick July 20, 2007

where is SVG? firefox - check, opera - check, safari - check. ie - silverlight - but NO svg. shame on you microsoft.

jherber July 20, 2007

Claiming that IE7 addresses problems in IE6's standards incompliance is demagoguery at its ugliest. Such claim is a lie and an insult to anybody who has actually tried to make their web applications work on IE7.

Fact: IE7 is even more broken. At least with IE6 people learnt, over the years, how to fix its many problems. IE7 is a new wave of headache, that is what it truly is.

Why doesn't Microsoft even start mentioning "standards" once it passes the ACID2 Browser Test (http://www.webstandards.org/action/acid2/)?

Irakli Nadareishvili July 20, 2007

Silverlight is not Windows only (its only windows only to develop with).

SVG is horrible to work with adnd the results don't come close to what you get with Flash or Silverlight.

Matt July 20, 2007

IE6 had a host of "standards" issues, they released IE7 claiming they followed standards even went as far as creating a page for csszengarden site, while it worked, everything we've programmed in house is written with clean code, looks the same in FF, Opera and Safari on Mac and PC, then only to find out not only do hacks need to be written for IE6, but different hacks have to be written for IE7. Microsoft should just stop building and releasing web browsers. And their new Expressions software scares me, bringing back the nightmares of Frontpage bloated code. Yikes!

david July 20, 2007

Web Standards are not being followed by Microsoft. Yes they addressed a few of them with IE7 but they are no where compliant as firefox or opera, which is the only browser that is 100% compliant. I hate creating pages for all different browsers, if all browsers were 100% web standards compliant, it would be a lot easier for all web designers. But Microsoft keeps screwing us up by saying they are on the top of the world with their browser. They need to make it web compliant or risk firefox gaining more of the browser market each month.

Shortshire July 21, 2007

No... Microsoft has learned nothng from their Web Standards mistake because they do NOT consider it a mistake.

This is one of the most arrogant, consumer unfriendly companies on the planet. Do you care about the ant you stepped on this morning?

Microsoft's response to Firefox was to re-create IE 6 with Tabs. Microsoft's response to Apple was the joke called Vista. Microsoft's response to Linux was to LIE to the world about patents. Microsoft's response to security was to patent the most sophisticated spyware system the world has ever seen.

This is a clueless company when it comes to consumer needs. They will bleed you dry and simply move on to the next company.

Frank August 15, 2007
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