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    Posts Tagged ‘web browsers’

    New Update To Internet Explorer Preview

    Sunday, May 9th, 2010

    Microsoft is trying to stay on par with Mozilla, Google’s Chrome and Apple’s Safari by introducing more web standards, support for HTML 5, and speeding up the rendering of Javascript for sites that rely heavily on the code base, such as Facebook. Microsoft has not fully embraced the standards community and has found points of contention with the decision of a standard for video codec and HTML 5 support.

    According to a couple reports, Internet Explorer held up fairly well in a Javascript-focused speed test.

    Microsoft has however seemed to shift it’s philosophy towards the web browser.  On the IE blog, in an article titled HTML5 and Same Markup: Second IE9 Platform Preview Available for Developers, Microsoft described their push towards standards: “web browsers should render the same markup — the same HTML, same CSS, and same script — the same way… that’s simply not the case today.”

    Source: http://blogs.msdn.com/ie/archive/2010/05/05/html5-and-same-markup-second-ie9-platform-preview-available-for-developers.aspx

    Microsoft To Support Only H.264 Web Video Format For HTML5

    Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

    Although Microsoft is going to support the native playback of videos for it’s Internet Explorer web browser, it will only allow the H.264 web video encoding format and not more “open” alternatives.

    The Worldwide Web Consortium (W3C) decided to not make a recommendation for a specific web video technology, leaving web browser designers to fight over which standards they will use (or in this case, fail to agree upon). Mozilla and Opera are supporting Ogg Theora and Google. Apple and Microsoft are supporting H.264.

    A concern for H.264:
    Many in the industry have concerns for the widespread adoption of H.264 because there are issues with patents and licensing, which prevents it from being freely used. Both Apple and Microsoft are patent holders in the H.264 patent pool.

    Background on H.264:
    H.264 (MPEG-4) (Advanced Video Coding) is a standard for video compression. H.264 is a block-oriented motion-compensation-based codec standard. It was developed by the ITU-T Video Coding Experts Group (VCEG) together with the ISO/IEC Moving Picture Experts Group (MPEG)

    Internet Explorer Market Share Falls Below 60 Percent

    Monday, May 3rd, 2010

    For years, Internet Explorer had a monopoly in the browser market. As of late, the popularity of Internet Explorer web browser has been diminishing steadily.

    According to a recent study by Net Applications, Internet Explorer has fell below 60 percent market share. Chrome and Firefox have been gaining significantly. In April, Internet Explorer’s market share was 59.95%. Google’s Chrome stole a lot from Internet Explorer: 6.73 percent (up from 6.13 percent).

    In May 2008, Microsoft had 75.94 percent of the web browser market.

    Net Applications - browser market share - www.netapplications.com

    Send Secret BCC Messages Within Group Email Using Gmail

    Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

    Have you ever wanted to send a BCC secret message as part of a larger group email? Well this feature is now available to Gmail and Firefox browser users with the BCCThis add-on.  The tool will add a second collapsible text box to the bottom of Gmail’s compose view that will allow you to add a second message as part of the larger email to any of it’s recipients.

    Bccthis for Gmail is a free download add-on for Firefox.

    Opera 10.52 Released For Mac OS X

    Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

    Opera 10.52, the newest version of the Opera web browser, was released for Mac OS X, and the latest version of the browser looks like it came straight out of the Apple design team lab. The browser also has some nice improvements that include speed boosts, more HTML5 support and better integration with the Mac OS platform. It is worth noting that Opera was one of the first to broadly support emerging standards for HTML5 and CSS 3.

    There have been some smaller usability updates as well, including the ability to search your bookmarks and history page as you type–similar to Firefox.

    EU Web Browser Ballot Doubles Opera’s Downloads

    Monday, March 22nd, 2010

    The European Union requires that Microsoft gives consumers a choice for their web browser. The browser ballot (choice screen) will present the top five web browsers in random order and allow users to download one or all of the browsers to use. Those browsers are: IE, Firefox, Google’s Chrome, Apple’s Safari, and Opera.  Many in the industry see this as a chance for smaller browsers to compete against the likes of Internet Explorer.

    Opera Web Browser has seen it’s number of downloads double directly as a result of this browser ballot. Opera reported that it’s European downloads for Opera 10.50 are up an average of 130 percent as a result of the ballot.

    Internet Explorer 9 Presented In Las Vegas

    Friday, March 19th, 2010

    Microsoft presented it’s next generation of the Internet Explorer web browser at the web developer’s conference in Las Vegas. At the conference, Microsoft put some code from the new browser on display and gave a “platform preview” of IE9.

    Internet Explorer 9 will have a new graphics rending engine that will draw upon the hardware (graphic chip) to boost the rendering of text and graphics from the web.

    Internet Explorer 9 is not yet a full featured web browser. However, Microsoft announced that it will be making code updates approximately every eight weeks in an attempt to move the software into BETA mode.

    New Exploit For IE Security Hole Published Via Twitter

    Thursday, March 11th, 2010

    An Israeli security researcher recently published his new discovery, the exploit code for a security hole in Internet Explorer web browser, via his Twitter page. The researcher discovered the exploit after receiving clues from a McAfee blog post.

    This new exploit affects IE 6 and IE 7  web browsers. The exploit has been targeted already in attacks and potentially could enable an attacker  in taking control of a users system.

    Microsoft’s next scheduled patch is in four weeks.

    Resources: Targeted Internet Explorer Zero-Day Attack Announced (CVE-2010-0806), McAfee

    Internet Explorer 9 Got Game?

    Thursday, March 4th, 2010

    The relevancy of Microsoft’s Internet Explorer has been fading. For a long time, IE has been anything but innovative in the eyes of the web development world. Recent releases of Opera, Firefox, Chrome and Safari have been a shining example of the future of the internet.

    The coming developer’s conference MIX 2010, Microsoft will be giving a preview of IE9–the next evolution of Internet Explorer. It is expected that the next version of Microsoft’s web browser will support HTML5 elements, vector graphics and emerging CSS standards. This could be critical for Microsoft to stay competitive in the browser game.

    EU forces Microsoft to offer users a choice of web browser

    Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

    There has been a resolution to the Internet Explorer antitrust case against Microsoft. Microsoft will now offer a choice to Windows users for their web browser. This “Choice Screen” will give Windows users more options than just internet explorer, which will open up competition in the web browser market for Europe.

    The “Choice Screen” will offer 12 of the most widely used Web browsers that run under Windows. The choice screen initially shows the five most widely used browsers, in random order: IE, Firefox, Google’s Chrome, Apple’s Safari, and Opera. There is also a horizontal scroll bar that will reveal other options as well–which are essentially up-start browsers that are getting a huge opportunity handed to them as a result of this anti-trust resolution.

    Here is the “Choice Screen” as seen in Windows explorer panel: