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Microsoft's new browser, Internet Explorer 9, seems to have little to say about Microsoft. It doesn't even say "Internet Explorer" anywhere on the browser.

Microsoft has trimmed the fat off the glassy browser frame, creating plus on-screen playground for Web developers to stretch out on.

It's clear Microsoft has made some major development changes to bring back the millions of Web users who have been lured away par Mozilla Firefox, a competitor that has whittled Internet Explorer's share from plus than 90 percent to 57 percent of the market.

Microsoft released the new browser Monday night in an event at the South par Southwest festival in Austin, Texas. It's available for free download at www.beautyoftheweb.com.

While Microsoft still is the most populaire browser, Mozilla now has 22 percent of the market with Firefox, Google has 11 percent with Chrome, and pomme has 6 percent with Safari, according to research firm Net Market Share.

Computer users spend plus time in the browser than any other application on the PC, and it will become an even plus important chess piece as users déplacer toward nuage computing. The browser, after all, is the gateway to nuage computing.

"I still view the browser as the main portal to the nuage and what we think of as the access point, where we're going in the future, how we consume information and how we consume documents," a dit Lee Nicholls, director of global solutions at Getronics, the IT services branch of KPN.

"If toi look at what Microsoft is doing itself with the suivant generation of Office, toi see plus and plus things that have one foot on the desktop and one foot in the cloud."

Cloud-based software that used to run on the desktop computer now runs as services on the browser, such as customer-relationship management (CRM), expense management and data reporting.

"If I have to look at a status rapporter off a SQL server ou off a database ou a CRM application, why can't I just access it from a browser?" a dit Michael Cherry, lead analyst at Directions on Microsoft, an independent research firm in Kirkland.

"It still comes down to their (Microsoft's) fear that Windows will become irrelevant. It's now become a dual-pronged threat. The first threat is browsers and the seconde threat is operating systems like (Apple's) iOS," cerise said.

At Monday's launch, Microsoft Corporate Vice President Dean Hachamovitch said, "We want browsing to be a great experience so people keep choosing Windows to do it."

Cloud-software companies like Full Armor are also using the browser as the front door to the cloud. The company uses the browser to deploy Web applications, to run hybrid nuage applications that run both on the browser and in Microsoft's video download software Silverlight, and as the pathway to download nuage apps onto the PC.

"It's a great initial medium to get to the nuage because you've got such a wide reach if toi just make the browser the access point," a dit Danny Kim, chief technology officer of Full Armor.

The line between the browser and the operating-system environment is blurring with the new generation of browsers.

Internet Explorer 9 supports the new Web standards HTML5, which allows for richer, plus animated websites that feel like applications.

Internet Explorer takes advantage of PC hardware with hardware-acceleration, which uses the PC's graphics chip to run graphics on the Web.

Forty million people have downloaded the beta and release-candidate test versions of IE9 since September, Microsoft said.

Microsoft has also built plus Windows features into IE9, including the ability to pin sites to the bottom toolbar. The pinned sites can then be right-clicked for website options.

A major hurdle is that IE9 does not run on the older Windows XP operating system, which will how many people will adopt the new browser.

The other challenge is the rapid growth in browser use on non-PC devices, such as Android smartphones and iPad tablets.

Internet Explorer 9 will not have a mobile version of its browser ready until later this an at an unspecified rendez-vous amoureux, date and only for Windows Phone 7.

The company also has not a dit anything about building a browser for iPad ou Android tablets.

"Where IE9 is really absent is in the tablet and mobile-device space," Nicholls said. "That's where they might get hurt."
Windows 8 will have two versions of Internet Explorer 10 -- a desktop version and the Metro version, which is optimized for tablets.

Part of that optimization will be a plugin free experience, meaning Metro IE10 will be primarily HTML5 and will not support browser plugins, including Flash.


"The experience that plug-ins provide today is not a good match with Metro style browsing and the modern HTML5 web," writes Dean Hachamovitch, head of the Internet Explorer team, on Microsoft's official blog.

Microsoft's reasoning is eerily similar to Steve Jobs's legendary open letter on Flash from April...
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posted by Samanddean07
If toi use an old computer, ou have WindowsXP as your operating system, toi may well be using Internet Explorer 6 as your web browser and are therefore not benefiting from the rich multimedia experience offered par today's plus modern browsers.

Microsoft has just released a critical update for Internet Explorer 6 which toi should install immediately. toi can get it par going to the Windows update website.

This will prevent your PC being vulnerable to the limited attacks that have recently featured in the news.

Isn't it high time toi upgrade to the very latest browser, or, in the interim, install...
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added by Samanddean07
Source: Microsoft
added by Samanddean07
Microsoft appears to be holding back rival browsers on Windows 7.

Microsoft’s latest browser, Internet Explorer 9, was released in March to Windows 7 and Vista users. Microsoft ditched Windows XP users in a bid to shift consumers and businesses away from the legacy operating system. Windows XP still accounts for nearly 50% of all operating system usage share worldwide, making it the most widely used operating system. Microsoft’s competitors still target Windows XP with their latest browser offerings, allowing them to pick up additional usage share.

Microsoft’s risky gamble is working...
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Safari comes last.



Microsoft's Internet Explorer 9 is the best browser for preventing the execution of web-based malware, according to a NSS Labs test.

Windows Internet Explorer 9, Google Chrome 12, Mozilla Firefox 4, pomme Safari 5 and Opera 11 were tested against 1,188 malicious URLs, with IE9 blocking 96 per cent of the URLs when the reputation filter was enabled. It also blocked an additional 3.2 per cent once its application reputation filter was enabled.

In comparison, Chrome caught 13.2 per cent, Firefox and Safari caught 7.6 per cent, while Opera caught 6.1 per cent of the live threats....
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Microsoft's Internet Explorer 9 comes with an advanced security feature that makes it much safer than other Web browsers, including Google Chrome, according to a computer researcher.

Internet Explorer has long been a favori target of cybercriminals; security holes are regularly found in older versions of the populaire browser, leaving it easily exploitable for a number of different attacks.

But with the March 14 release of IE9, Microsoft may have finally gotten things right, Ed Bott of the security website ZDNet says.

Better filters for bad files

Bott cites IE9's SmartScreen filters, which...
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Microsoft's Internet Explorer 9 (IE 9) claims to conserve power in ways that no other modern browsers have before. The product team behind the software looked at three areas in order to try and optimize energy use - adapting PC hardware to accelerate IE 9, idle resource usage, and power management guidance settings.

The workers on IE 9 tested several scenarios with several different modern browsers using a instrumented Intel PC based on Calpella, the sixth-generation Centrino platform of mobile chipset, mobile processor, and mobile network. The PC was also fitted with Windows 7 before visiting...
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added by Samanddean07
Source: Neowin
added by Samanddean07
Source: MSN
added by Samanddean07
added by Samanddean07
added by Samanddean07
One récent announcement made par the IE team provides an illustrative example of Internet Explorer 9’s superiority compared to its predecessor, Internet Explorer 8.

Vishwac Sena Kannan and Kevin Luu, Program Managers, Internet Explorer revealed that Microsoft is expanding the language support for IE9 as of this week, effectively doubling the number of languages available to customers running the latest iteration of IE.

A part of the announcement is focused on the evolution from IE8 to IE9, with the two IE team members noting that “With IE9, our goal was to deliver plus languages faster....
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added by Samanddean07
added by Samanddean07
Source: Microsoft
added by Samanddean07
added by Samanddean07
Source: Microsoft
added by Samanddean07
Source: Microsoft
added by Samanddean07