We advise both our faculty and students to use Firefox, as it is the most consistently reliable - and that's a hard thing for an old diehard IE user to have to say.
That being said, we also advise our users that when something does not appear to be working, try another browser. That is something I find really hard to say, and it often feels like I am apologizing for a deficiency not of my creation. However, I do understand the root cause of browser issues - my office partner and I call it "The Browser Wars". It must be incredibly difficult for application engineers to keep up with browsers that update their systems every 49 seconds or so. An exaggeration? Well maybe, but Firefox has gone from version 8 (mid 2013) to version 31 in just two years! To quote Phoebe Buffay, "It make my mind wobble!"
Since I don't see an easy solution, I simply revert to a life-long philosophy "He who stays flexible shall not be bent out of shape". Or John Lennon's famous quote, "Life is what happens while you are making other plans". Both of which can be handy when you work in any information technology field.
Toffler defines the term "future shock" as a certain psychological state of individuals and entire societies. His shortest definition for the term is a personal perception of "too much change in too short a period of time"
There, now I feel like a true academic with all those quotes and references.:smileysilly: We all know that everyone with a Doctorate in Education quotes Phoebe Buffay, right?
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