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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 more 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 by Mozilla Firefox, a competitor that has whittled Internet Explorer's share from more than 90 percent to 57 percent of the market.

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

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

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

"I still view the browser as the main portal to the cloud 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," said Lee Nicholls, director of global solutions at Getronics, the IT services branch of KPN.

"If you look at what Microsoft is doing itself with the next generation of Office, you see more and more 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 report off a SQL server or off a database or a CRM application, why can't I just access it from a browser?" said 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 second threat is operating systems like (Apple's) iOS," Cherry 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 cloud applications that run both on the browser and in Microsoft's video download software Silverlight, and as the pathway to download cloud apps onto the PC.

"It's a great initial medium to get to the cloud because you've got such a wide reach if you just make the browser the access point," said 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, more 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 more 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 limit 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 year at an unspecified date and only for Windows Phone 7.

The company also has not said anything about building a browser for iPad or Android tablets.

"Where IE9 is really absent is in the tablet and mobile-device space," Nicholls said. "That's where they might get hurt."
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Source: Me My Screenshot
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Source: Microsoft
Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser has escaped a huge memory leak flaw affecting rival browsers.

The flaw was posted to the Chromium issue tracker earlier this month. Internet Explorer 7, 8 and 9 are not affecting by the issue according to initial developer testing. The Next Web reports that Chrome is affected, alongside Firefox and Safari. Opera’s browser has not been tested.

The memory leak occurs when an image result contains a “Cache-control:no-store” attribute as it loads. Browsers are supposed to load the images and then free the memory up post load. The bug means memory is never...
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WordPress has announced that the blogging platform will no longer support Microsoft's Internet Explorer 6 web browser.

The ten year old web browser continues to be used by many, who don’t pay attention to warnings that they need to upgrade. The browser is not secure and is no longer supported by many websites. Even Microsoft, its creator, has likened the aged web browser to sour milk.

In a blog post, Word Press revealed that the website will no longer support the web browser. Visiting the website from IE6 will prompt the user that the web browser is insecure and would advise them to install...
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The IE10 Platform Preview Guide for Developers provides an early look at the developer features coming to the next version of Internet Explorer. By using the documentation and samples in this guide, web developers and designers can prepare to use these new features. To download and install Internet Explorer Platform Preview, see the Internet Explorer Test Drive site.

This topic contains the following sections:

Contents

What’s in the Guide

About the Platform Preview

Compatibility Modes

Compatibility View List

User-agent String

Sending Feedback

Revision History

Cascading Style Sheets (CSS)

CSS3 Flexible...
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Microsoft has started distributing a new version on Internet Explorer 9 through Windows Update. IE 9.0.1 is being pushed automatically to all IE9 RTW customers through WU since the new release is nothing more than the first security update for Internet Explorer 9.

The first patch package for IE9 comes as a part of the June 2011 Cumulative Security Update for Internet Explorer, which the software giant is serving via WU.

Obviously, the IE security bulletin is designed to address vulnerabilities in all supported releases of Internet Explorer. In total, the Redmond company plugged no less than...
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Microsoft has removed a rogue SSL root certificate issued by DigiNotar from the list of trusted Windows root certificates in an effort designed to protect users of Internet Explorer from attacks impersonating Google online properties, including Gmail.

Dave Forstrom, director of Trustworthy Computing for Microsoft, informed that the software giant is only aware of a single fraudulent DigiNotar digital certificate so far, which is no longer featured on the Microsoft Certificate Trust List.

“DigiNotar has since revoked the digital certificate. This is not a Microsoft security vulnerability;...
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Source: Neowin
As the week’s pass and Microsoft continues to develop Windows 8, the amount of leaked builds continues to rise. Just today Neowin reported that Windows 8 will have a metro-style PDF reader and earlier this week we reported that it may also come with a ribbon UI, similarly to that of which they have in their Office products. Well today, a little more information has been revealed thanks to Rafael Rivera and Paul Thurrott.

From previous leaks we can see that Microsoft is heading towards a metro-like, tiles-based GUI instead of carrying on with developing Aero and Aero Lite. We have seen an...
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icrosoft’s Internet Explorer 9 and 10 browsers both pass the infamous Acid3 test thanks to changes by its authors.

Google employee Ian Hickson and Opera employee Håkon Wium Lie both announced changes to the Acid3 test on Saturday. The changes will allow more browsers to pass the test and focus on allowing the specs to change according to what’s best for the web. ”As the Web matures, we have made a concerted effort to improve the precision of Web technology specifications,” said Hickson in a Google+ post on Saturday.”We’re trying to simplify parts of the platform that still haven’t...
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Source: Neowin
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