The results are out from the latest Net Applications survey of Web browser market share, and Google continues to capture market share and headlines with its Chrome Web browser. Drilling down into the ...
Microsoft's Internet Explorer 8 will be released to the public later today. We were given advanced access to the final version and have been using it for a few days now -- ditching Chrome on the PC ...
Will you be turning Internet Explorer 8 off in Windows 7? Don Reisinger won't be and explains exactly why. Don Reisinger CNET contributor Don Reisinger is a technology columnist who has covered ...
Microsoft's got a lot of reputation riding on the final releases of Windows 7 and Internet Explorer 8. Making both available to the masses in beta version is a good way to take the pulse of public ...
It seems that only yesterday, Internet Explorer was a clunky abomination of a browser that lagged behind its competition in all features, crashed constantly, and was generally frowned upon by anyone ...
What happens now if you're using Internet Explorer 8, 9 or 10. — -- Internet Explorer is dead as we know it. The ubiquitous browser, which made its debut two decades ago, has been officially put ...
Net Applications has published the latest monthly browser market share stats. Microsoft’s Internet Explorer Web browser rebounded for the second month in a row, as both Firefox and Chrome declined in ...
Those who expect Internet Explorer 8 to be a warmed-over version of IE7 or a me-too response to Firefox 3 will be surprised by the just-released Beta 2 of IE8. It offers a well-thought-out set of ...
The just-released Release Candidate 1 (RC1) of Internet Explorer 8 is a fast, stable browser, tweaked for productivity and security, with few obvious changes over the previous Beta 2 release. RC1 is ...
Here's how it breaks down. Microsoft released IE8 Beta 1 before XP Service Pack 3 became available. Users who downloaded and installed SP3 after IE8 Beta 1 are urged by Microsoft to manually uninstall ...
It would seem one of Microsoft’s new Internet Explorer 8 ads is a little more than some viewers can stomach, prompting the company to pull the ad from its Better Browser site and YouTube Channel.