That is one of them, but lets say you want a box which is 50% of the window width. You need an overall top container to define the width, a top left image, a top middle image and a top right image. Next you need the middle section which holds the content. Then you need to the bottom container and a bottom left image, a bottom middle image, and a bottom right image. With CSS3 you could just set a border-radius of 10 and call it quits. Also, IE only supports eot formats for the @font-fact feature and it is rather annoying to convert a ttf or otf to eot format. Plus there are a bunch of other CSS3 features which probably won't get supported by IE until ten years from now. Then it will take another ten years for people to transit from IE 7 and 8 to the version which does support CSS3, and by then we will be on CSS5 or something and IE will still be the web designers nightmare.Like rounded border?
http://www.css3.info/preview/rounded-border/
I typically do that in Gimp and have it as an image.
You should asked what I like cos it's easier when you DON'T HAVE ANYTHING TO REMEMBER.
Here's my answer http://forums.x10hosting.com/graphics-webdesign/95665-stop-ie6.html
Or this image can describe it better:
We take great pride in the functionality and user friendliness of our Web site. In order to provide you with the best quality service, we cannot lower our standards to support a Web standards incompliant browser. Please, do yourself, and the Internet in whole a favor and download one of these standard compliant Web browsers: Firefox, Safari, Opera, or Google Chrome.
Thank you!
you can get by without supporting IE6, but if you want a serious website, you have to supoort IE. If you show a message like that, most IE users will just say screw it and leave to never come back.Not if you show a message why?
Such as:
I would put something like that.
you have to be consistent with all browsers if you want serious credibility.
To hell with that