QUOTE(Tyssen @ Jan 23 2006, 08:42 PM)
How do you know everyone will be using Firefox with js enabled? There's no way you can possibly know that unless you hand out invitations to your site and password protect it to prevent people who aren't invited using it.
As for using js for navigation, if you decide to go down that route, then you need fallback measures in place for those people who do have js turned off or they won't be able to access areas of your site.
If this is just a personal site, then it probably doesn't matter so much, but if you're intending it to be a business site, you're effectively losing customers by not covering all the bases.
lol, my personal site will only be visited by my friend's, family, random stalkers. and of those people who make up 95% of my audience, they all use firefox with js enabled, yes. I know this for a fact. We're the smart croud who forsook anything MS a long time ago. As for the 5% stalkers who may or may not have js enabled, all they'll be missing out on is a little news headline marquee. They will still be able to use the rest of the site.
As for the business side, I always place simple HTML auxillery links at the bottom of the page just in case images/javascript/CSS/etc don't work for them. It's standard practice for me.
As for whether or not I should even use javascript in the first place, well... it comes down to the design itself. Some of my designs look great without one non-HTML code segment in the entire source code. Others require a bit more interactivity. but with the majority of people running js-enabled browsers, it's not that big of deal. There are only a small percentage of people I've ever encountered who run without javascript, and that is mainly because they want to browse faster, in which case, they won't be browsing sites like mine, if you know what i mean

err... clarification: heavy-scripted sites, online gaming clan sites, interactive online movie sites, etc. etc.
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