What's really weird
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Author | Content |
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Khamul Feb 02, 2012 8:07 PM EDT |
What's really weird is that these cr@ppy CRM/ERP companies haven't updated their cr@ppy products to work on newer browsers. How do they expect to get any new customers with such a poor product, and especially after XP is no longer supported? |
mrider Feb 02, 2012 8:20 PM EDT |
They expect to make money on their existing customers by forcing them to pay again for CRM/ERP version n+1 where the +1 is "works with something other than I.E. 6.0". |
Khamul Feb 02, 2012 10:20 PM EDT |
@mrider: That would make sense, except that it's been years since IE6 was declared "dead" and their products apparently still require it. If they haven't figured out how to move away from IE6 by now, I don't think they're going to within the next year. Unless they already have, and the customers are refusing to upgrade because of the cost, but if that were the case, then these ex-Redmond guys with their "Browsium" company shouldn't have much of a business, because then it comes down to two choices, upgrade your CRM/ERP application ($$$), or buy this Browsium software to avoid the upgrade ($$$) and then be stuck with old, out-of-date, unsupported software. |
mrider Feb 03, 2012 12:25 PM EDT |
I'm not saying that the plan I outlined is the only plan, but it sure is one of their plans. We're still stuck on I.E. 6 where I work specifically because the dumb bunnies in management specified I.E. 6 compatibility when speccing our systems. (I argued against it at every opportunity and lost the argument). I know it's happening, because it's happening where I work. |
jhansonxi Feb 03, 2012 1:07 PM EDT |
Considering that the company mentioned has an IE6 compatibility module for newer IE versions, I wonder how much work it would be to make the same for a Linux-compatible browser (or even OS X). |
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