This Browser Is Not Supported -

We have mistaken testing coverage for technical reality. We have outsourced our judgment to a CI pipeline.

Not your safety. Not your experience. Not your autonomy. Our metrics. Our conversion funnels. Our sleek, minimalist design that breaks on your “legacy” user agent string.

Often, the site works fine. You just have to dismiss the warning. Click past the fear. The red banner disappears, and the content loads anyway. Because “not supported” rarely means “impossible.” It almost always means “we didn’t test it, and we’re afraid.” This browser is not supported

This browser is not supported is not a technical error.

Today’s web says: "I understand you perfectly. And I reject you." We have mistaken testing coverage for technical reality

That little grey box. Those four cold words.

And that is the difference between a technical limitation and a cultural statement. Not your experience

Behind every “unsupported browser” is a developer who decided not to write the fallback code. Not because it was impossible, but because it was unprofitable. Or unfashionable. Or because the framework they used didn’t support it, and retooling the framework would take three extra days. And in the velocity-driven logic of the web, three days is a geological era.