it clearly demonstrates that on www.sl113.org IE is less than 50% of the share (even though 70% of our users still use Windows).
Yes, IE is is less than 50%. BUT, didn't you notice that at this "less than 50%", it still has TWICE as many users on our site, as the next in line, Safari? All the rest, then, make up the difference.
My point is, all the programmer/computer guy venom against Microsoft aside, that they still have a majority share, and things should be designed to work for that. If you design a webpage for optimized viewing and behavior on Chrome, for example, you are catering to 10% of the population. I tried Firefox and Chrome on the PC here and they did not behave properly, and my favorite websites, such as this, didn't display as nice and were more difficult to read.
...and while Apple is the good guy and Microsoft is the bad guy, there are two sides to every story. I installed Quicktime once, and during the installation process it took control of every thing it could, destroying long-standing relationships on my computer between certain files and certain programs--and the result was a mediocre movie player. I installed iTunes once as well, and the same thing happened, taking control of every music file it could find, and corrupting long-standing relationships set up with other audio programs on my computer, and also with my accounting files which by conincidence share a common file name extension with certain Apple files. These were highly invasive installs. Other programs from other vendors do the same kind of thing, too, of course--but to just cast aspersions on Microsoft in favor of Apple doesn't cover each case and every story.
When I display a web page, and the "real content" of the webpage is 20%, and 80% is dynamic junk/ads/popups/whatever that bogs down the computer's video card with complex screen redraws that change every time you drill around a site, I'd suggest the programmers are at least partially responsible for that. Site owners and managers are also responsible, for demanding that of programmers.
In our site here, it really, truly is one of the nicest, best behaving websites that I ever visit. For sure, there are some things that could be better, but it is clean, and well designed. This one little issue I had (others had noticed) was so small that most didn't bother to mention it. I found a work-around and left it at that. Peter fixed it anyway.