Getting to 99% of websites will be straightforward, but the last 1% will be tough. Everybody has an obscure website they rely on regularly. Every one of those warts grown during the torturous evolution of the web is depended on by some web site somewhere. https://xkcd.com/1172/
> Getting to 99% of websites will be straightforward, but the last 1% will be tough. Everybody has an obscure website they rely on regularly. Every one of those warts grown during the torturous evolution of the web is depended on by some web site somewhere. https://xkcd.com/1172/
I often mention that in Germany, Firefox has a much higher market share of the browsers than in most other countries:
See for example the statistic of browser market shares among desktop users:
Of course, because Firefox does not have this large market share in many other countries, there exist some (rare) websites that don't work so well in Firefox. But since the Firefox users (at least in Germany) often are very vocal about their browser
- If the website is "not important": ignore it; who would want to visit a website where the developer/company does not care about Firefox?! :-) Additionally, use this as a great opportunity for venting anger, and write some furious e-mail to the webmaster of the website why they dare to ignore Firefox users. :-)
- If the website is "important": use, say, Chrome for this single website - and then write some furious e-mail to the webmaster of the website why they dare to ignore Firefox users. :-)
TLDR: It is much more important that the users of the web browser are very vocal about using it than about getting the last 0.1 % of websites to work.