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Windows Vista Weblog

Out black spot … er … IE7

by John on December 5th, 2005

Don Park, of whom Dave Winer has said “He knows what he’s talking about”, believes Microsoft should scrap IE7. Reason? It has a long list of legacy problems.

His solution :

1. Let it just rot and, instead, build a new browser that taps .NET 2.0’s full potential.
2. ActiveX? Leave it behind.
3.Netscape Plugins compatibilty? AJAX? Out with them.

In a comment on his post he elaborates :

HTML is just another content type while the browser can be far more than just an HTML viewer. At the platform-level, built-in support for sessions, local storage/database, fine-grained caching, identities, directories, user-level zoning, graphics engine, and others could make new breed of web applications possible. Security-wise, what about running “virtual machines” as a “page” that can be accessed with a simple hyperlink? What if virtual machines can be “stacked” together like slabs of concretes, each tamperproof, to be used as “platform” for rich web applications?

Does the man have a point?

POSTED IN: IE7, Microsoft, Windows

2 opinions for Out black spot … er … IE7

  • A Feed Is Born » RSS at Les Blogs 2.0
    Dec 6, 2005 at 2:03 pm

    […] Conclusion of the panel discussion: - Subscribing to feeds will be different. With the introduction of IE7 (legacy?) and Windows Vista there will be a lot of people that don’t even know that they’re using feeds. So this weblog will become obsolete;) - OPML will be very important, concerning localisation and automatic translation of RSS feeds - Individual Live RSS: relevante content (adds) around rss feeds - RSS feeds wil generate more content, for example different feeds being combined to one new feed (All Google blogs in one feed). […]

  • » IE7: clear my tracks Windows Vista Weblog
    Jan 18, 2006 at 12:18 pm

    […] I think IE7 is the most important part of the new OS. Some say IE is legacy and MS should leave it but it seems like they’re doing a good job with the tabbed browsing, RSS features and so on. There’s also this feature called ‘Delete Browsing History’ that gives users an easy way to control the data stored by the browser. As you might know, this function takes forever to complete and takes away all your processing capacity. Well, the IE7 team added a bonus, because if cleaning up takes a while, a cancellable progress dialog is shown. You can ignore the dialog and go back to the browser (or even close it) and the process will continue in the background until it’s done. No more sitting around waiting for your 200MB cache to be emptied, finally! […]

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