I'm pretty much strictly an IE person on my machines. I've tried Opera in the past, and I didn't really care for it. (It felt clunkier than IE, and how it manages favorites is not appealing to me.) Chrome I'm staying away from due to Google's privacy issues that have been cropping up. Safari is my browser of choice on a Mac, but I don't own one, nor do I prefer it to IE. So that leaves me with no other choice.
Oh, yeah, there's that crap called Firefox. I will never use that program, ever. First of all, I do not like having to install plugin after plugin to make it work how I want it to. Each plugin will just take up more and more resources. Couple this with the memory leak present in it, and it would require me to restart my computer more often than I do with IE. And it has some of the most arrogant users I have ever seen. It is those users that have made me swear off it entirely. They try to say that because I use IE, that I'm the problem with the internet. Sorry, but no. MS has been going more standards-compliant since IE6 for the web developers, but my using it isn't why MS has their own set of codes. If those users think that the only way to get someone to switch is to whine about how broken IE is, and how it's this huge problem, then no, I will never switch. I do not experience the problems that they claim exist; trying to say that they are a universal problem doesn't make matters better either. (Sure, some people have some of the problems, but it's not everyone.)
So yeah, I use IE. It works for me, and it lets me customize just those few things I need to. And, through smart browsing, I've never had a virus on my computer. (Yes, I do scan on a weekly basis.) So, from my perspective, I use the old saying, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." I don't see that IE is broke, so don't try to tell me that it is. Your words then will only fall onto unreceptive ears (or eyes on the internet).
-dunno001
-On a quest for the truly perfect game; I don't think it exists...