(as the article mentions: work-around needed with conditional comments)
absolutely off-topic and yes a bit unreasonable, but after years of webdevelopment, i'm getting a little cranky at every mention of this "browser" that microsoft forces developers to put up with. Yes, i know this is a "new" html5 feature and that i cant expect corporations or consumers to keep in-house browsers up-to-date, but really: its a microsoft failure. Is it really _that_ hard to keep up with the competition?
– Chrome, from version 14
– Firefox from version 20 (current)
– Android Browser from version 10 (current)
– Chrome for Android from version 25 (current).