It's fun to blow of steam by slamming whatever has recently annoyed you, but even Microsoft is actually made up of real human beings, mostly doing the best they can while stuck between a rock, a hard place, and a manager or two with very different goals than yours. While it feels like "IE sucks goats, and nobody should ever use it" is more likely to get noticed than "the IE CSS bug that messes up scrolling makes it really hard to do CSS layout", the fact is that the first will just get you ignored by anyone who can actually do anything about it, while the second, turning up in someone's Feedster search for "IE CSS bug", has a chance (however small) of being heard
In a recent botched suicide attempt, the entire MSDN Library staff blew off the left half of their collective brain with a small caliber squirrel hunting rifle. Although the MSDN Library staff is still marginally functional, and the incessant drool does not seem to be causing any interference with their computing gear, the disintegration of any capacity for composing a reasonable knowledge taxonomy has begun to wilt the usability of the once grand library. Examples of this are evident in the burying of topics such as the Application Blocks for .NET under the "Building Distributed Applications with .NET" Node. A more spurious classification would be hard to fathom. It is, however, an interesting study on the functioning of a human brain without the capacity for classification and categorization