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Microsoft Ends IE for Mac

RandomMacUser writes "A while ago, Microsoft stopped updating IE for Mac, freezing it at version 5. But according to this Microsoft webpage, all support will cease December 31, 2005, and any official distribution with cease January 31, 2006. Also, the webpage suggests 'that Macintosh users migrate to more recent web browsing technologies such as Apple's Safari.'"

25 of 728 comments (clear)

  1. Interesteing Problems by ben_white · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I use a Mac and love it, but I am concerned about this development, as there are few websites (including my bank) which don't work with Safari (and my bank's web pages don't load correctly on Firefox).

    --
    cheers, ben

    Never miss a good chance to shut up -- Will Rogers
    1. Re:Interesteing Problems by Hiro+Antagonist · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Have you told your bank? Because problems like this never get fixed if nobody complains. More importantly, if you tell them that their pages are broken in Firefox/Safari, and they tell you to get IE, switch banks, because businesses tend to listen when they lose customers because of things like this. When you close your accounts, and they ask the reason, tell them why.

      You wouldn't buy a lawnmower that only worked on 'Black & Decker' grass, you wouldn't buy a knife that only cut 'Chicago Cutlery' brand onions, so why the hell would you do business with a bank that forces you to use tools that you don't want to, namely, Windows and IE?

      --

      --
      I Hit the Karma Cap, and All I Got Was This Lousy .sig.
    2. Re:Interesteing Problems by Androclese · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I had the same problem with Bank One (Chase). I explained to them that they needed to get with the times and update their website; especially considering that IE is full of security holes and no developed for on Mac.

      She told me nothing was going to change.

      She was wrong.

      I changed banks to one that had Safari / Camino / Firefox browser support.

    3. Re:Interesteing Problems by dynamo · · Score: 5, Funny

      Except when you consider that mac users are going to have disproportionately larger bank accounts.

    4. Re:Interesteing Problems by tftp · · Score: 5, Funny

      That's true only before they buy their Macs.

    5. Re:Interesteing Problems by MTO_B. · · Score: 5, Informative

      Also, do this.
      Firefox > Help > Inform about an incompatible website...
      Fill the details, send.

    6. Re:Interesteing Problems by soren42 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Actually, this is somewhat incorrect. I am a VP at top 5 US bank, and I used to lead the team that develops our public website. There are significant regulations and compliance issues that arise with public software testing, including the website. While I can only speak for my employer, we test against IE for Windows and Mac OS, Firefox on Windows, Mac OS, and Linux, Safari, and Opera on Windows, Mac OS, and Linux. Additionally, we certify our site uses 100% W3C DTD-compliant DHTML and is fully accessable by users with disabilities.

      There are certain laws that have been applied to banking websites, such as the Americans with Disabilities Act and other anti-discrimination laws. Besides, it's much easier and cheaper for a bank's web team to design with accessability and browser compatibility in mind up front than do a bunch of back-porting and fixing when the customer complaints start rolling in - or worse, when the customer lawsuits start coming! Most banks I deal with also now hire external services to audit their sites for accessability.

      Of course, these are only my opinions and do not officially represent the views or practices of my employer. YMMV. Blah blah blah.

      --

      "Adventure? Excitement? A Jedi craves not these things."
  2. Hmmm. by Caspian · · Score: 5, Funny
    ...the webpage suggests 'that Macintosh users migrate to more recent web browsing technologies such as Apple's Safari.'

    In other news, the RNC chairperson suggested 'that Republicans migrate to other parties such as the Democratic party', and North Korean leader Kim Jung-Il suggest that 'North Koreans embrace alternative political systems, such as capitalism'...
    --
    With spending like this, exactly what are "conservatives" conserving?
  3. What the? by omeomi · · Score: 5, Funny

    The next article down the page says: "Find out how Internet Explorer 5 for Mac can show you the Internet in new, exciting ways." ???

  4. What? by trepidation_i_am · · Score: 5, Funny

    They dont recomend Firefox? Well I never..

  5. Wait, is this supposed to help M$? by Daedius · · Score: 5, Informative

    Guess that just means more firefox users on Mac now. Now with versions optimized toward their architectures now too.

  6. Once A Great Project by sophiaknows · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's been easy to hate on since MS stopped updating it in like 2001 anyway. But IE 5 for Mac was the best and most standards compliant browser on any platform the day it was released. Awesome work by the original team. Sad it came from MS. Sadder still that they basically abandoned it once their contractual obligations to Apple were up

  7. A casualty of the Intel transition by rekoil · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is most likely due to the upcoming Intel transition. IE is written against the Carbon APIs (and most likely in CodeWarrior), which by all accounts (including Jobs himself) takes substantially more code refactoring to make Intel-compatible than a Cocoa application. IE simply looked at the dev costs of continued maintenance in light of making it Mactel compatible, and said "meh, it's not doing anything for us anyway". And they need those brains working on porting Office:mac, which actually does make MS money. Personally, I haven't launched IE on my Mac in months, so I doubt I'm going to miss it.

  8. Re:MS gets wise by Michalson · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Exactly. IE is a free product, but costs Microsoft money to develop (it's not just a port of Windows IE). Office for Mac makes money, but IE only exists to try and "enrich" whatever platform it's on. Back in the day IE was actively developed for the Mac (along with some major cash from Microsoft being pumped into Apple's stock) it was because Apple was down on it's luck.

    There was no way Microsoft was going to let it's main "competitor" die off. If Apple disappeared, it would allow enough space in the desktop market for a new, real competitor to enter (like Linux - at the moment Linux has to compete with both Windows *and* OS X, making it much harder to be accepted as a mainstream consumer desktop OS).

    A long as Apple is in the picture taking up the number 2 position, Microsoft has a safety against real competition on the desktop, simply because of how certain brand markets tend to operate (Coke vs. Pepsi, Intel vs. AMD, etc). Now that Apple is doing well, there is no reason for Microsoft to pay extra money to keep Apple in the game. They can just sit back and watch Apple act as an albatros in the plans of Linux and any other potential desktop competitor, safe in the knowledge that Apple itself will never actually grow beyond a certain percentage of the market.

  9. Seems like a wast of time to me by stunt_penguin · · Score: 5, Funny

    Couldn't they have just emailed both people still using IE on the Mac and saved themselves the trouble of a whole press release.

    --
    When the posters fear their moderators, there is tyranny; when the moderators fears the posters, there is liberty.
  10. Re:MS gets wise by Mikey-San · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's more "whining" than anything else, you just have to go back a little bit to find it:

    Although Microsoft may continue to provide security and performance updates, no major new releases are planned, Microsoft Product Manager Jessica Sommer told CNET News.com. Sommer said that, with the emergence of Apple's Safari browser, Microsoft felt that customers were better served by using Apple's browser, noting that Microsoft does not have the access to the Macintosh operating system that it would need to compete.

    http://news.com.com/2100-1045_3-1017126.html

    I call complete and utter whiny bullshit on this. It's not that they CAN'T compete, it's that they don't WANT to compete. OmniWeb dropped their proprietary rendering engine for WebCore/Kit and began focusing even harder on their wonderful UI. Why couldn't Microsoft have done this? Lots of applications have integrated Kit/Core, from third-party Web browser to instant messaging clients. I guess Microsoft doesn't have the resources that some 18-year-old kid with an ADC account does, right?

    Irony: "We can't compete because someone else makes the OS and we don't have full access to it." - Microsoft

    Call me a fucking waaaaaaaaaaaaaahmbulance, Redmond. You lost on this platform because you couldn't make a good Web browser if you tried, and all you did was blame someone else.

    --
    Mikey-San
    Karma: +Eleventy billion (mostly affected by watching Celebrity Jeopardy)
  11. (was Interesteing Problems) by shking · · Score: 5, Informative

    Have you tried spoofing the webserver? (i.e. your browser tells the bank's webserver that it is IE, when it is in fact Safari, Firefox, Opera or whatever). The default .net website sends out custom pages for each type of browser. This is a great temporary workaround and has worked for me many times:

    1. from the Terminal command line: defaults write com.apple.safari IncludeDebugMenu 1
    2. start Safari
    3. select Debug > User Agent and choose a browser

    Opera has this capability built in

    Firefox and Camino are left as a (trivial) exercise for the reader (a couple minutes searching Google should do it)

    --
    -- "At Microsoft, quality is job 1.1" -- PC Magazine, Nov. 1994
    1. Re:(was Interesteing Problems) by leenoble_uk · · Score: 5, Informative

      Additionally, my bank specifically stated that Safari was not supported. I chose to ignore this warning and indeed the initial setup process failed because I needed to download a secure certificate which involved some IE/Moz specific capability apparently. So I used Firefox to get the certificate and then exported it to the desktop and imported it into Keychain Access. Now my bank's website works perfectly well with Safari.

  12. Re:Speaking of Safari (Gap.com) by Reaperducer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I had this problem with the Gap web site a few weeks ago.

    I solved the problem by shopping at another online store. The Gap lost about $800 in Chrismtas sales from me that I spent elsewhere. If I was a shareholder, I'd be pissed that they're turning away customers.

    I hope they saved at least that much by hiring incompetent web site developers.

    --
    -- I'm old enough to have lived through six different meanings of the word "hacker."
  13. Re:Speaking of Safari (Gap.com) by lancejjj · · Score: 5, Funny

    The GAP sez:
        We're working on supporting Safari. Please check back soon.

    Well, that's understandable. It can be a chore for retailers to support the web.

    Maybe I'll wager $12 that GAP spent more money talking about and implementing the "we don't support Safari" message than it would take to get their site to support Safari. Who wants to take me up on that one?

    Go ahead, let me know. Someone analyze their site and let me know what it'd take for Safari support.

  14. Re:but how many mac users will complain? by Nutria · · Score: 5, Insightful
    How many of these users will complain instead of getting a work around?

    Politely complaining is actually a very effective tactic, since "they" know that for every complainer, there's a hundred who stay silent and move to a different business. It has worked for me in on-line banking.
    "Hi,
    Your web banking app doesn't load properly with Mozilla 1.blah. I really like this bank, but for security reasons refuse to use IE. So, please configure your site to not be dependent on security disaster IE.
    Sincerely,
    blah blah
    --
    "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
  15. Not a surpirse by plazman30 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    People seem to think that IE for Mac in some way used the same rendering engine that the Windows verison uses. This is far from the truth. The Mac version of IE is much more standards compliant and has none of the quirks that IE for Windows has, which pretty much means that it helps no one on the Mac side view IE specific web pages.

    However, the corporate perception of the death of IE is another matter entirely. Though I would hope that the new popularity of FireFox will show IT mamagers that IE is not the only show in town and letting their Mac user use Safari, Shiira, Opera, Camino (my personal favorite) or Firefox is not that bad an option.

    I think the Mac platform has far better browser choices than Windows has now. I was really liking K-Meleon there for a while, but I find the UI needs more work.

  16. I was on the MacIE 6 team when it got canned... by jbx · · Score: 5, Interesting

    MacIE had one of the strangest and saddest histories I've seen, of any product.

    MacIE 5 was an awesome release, critically aclaimed and everything, with a good development team and a strong testing team, that included daily performance measurement.

    And yet, almost immediately after 5.0 was released, the MacIE team was redeployed to work on a set-top DVR box. The notion at the time was that the team would continue to do MacIE work in their spare time, since IE 5 was the leader among Mac browsers and no longer needed a full-time team.

    The problem with that notion was that WebTV, the team's new bosses, had no reason to actually schedule any time for real IE work. So later, when that particular set-top box got cancelled, the IE team got redployed for other WebTV work, and since this was now out of MacBU's control, nothing could really be done.

    3 or 4 years went by before enough people in the Mac division wanted to resume work on IE, and when it looked like we might actually need the technology, as a base for MSN-for-Mac, the IE 6 team was formed. It got a firm OS X-only foundation, a new even more complient browser base, and then suddenly it became apparent that Apple was doing their own browser, because, well, there were lots of small clues, but the big clues was that Apple had started calling the old Mac IE team offering them jobs.

    By that time the Mac division had formally committed to MSN-for-Mac-OSX, so it's not like we were completely going to stop work. But a meeting was held internally, the outcome of which was that it didn't make sense to build our own browser if Apple was going to bundle one, because the marketshare and mindshare of the distant-second-place browser, on the distant-second-place platform, wasn't worth pursuing. A week later we had a meeting with high-up people at Apple, where they told us they were doing a browser. And the week after that, after confirming it with Bill Gates, who was reportedly sad but understanding of the decision, MacIE was officially shut down.

    MSN-for-MacOSX went ahead, and was also critically acclaimed, but once released, indications were that the number of users was about the same as the number of developers. After that, MacBU concentrated once again on the next Office release, and MacIE has been well and truly and permanently dead ever since.

    Over the whole sad journey, the single most surprising thing I ever discovered was from a small conversation that went:

    Me: "Look, if it makes sense to devote dozens of people to WinIE, then surely it makes sense to devote half a dozen to MacIE!"

    Higher-up: <confused look> "There aren't dozens of people on WinIE. WinIE had some great people on it! We need those great people on products that make money!"

    Me: "Then why on earth did we pursue IE in the first place? Just so that the DOJ would sue us?"

    Higher-up: <confused look>

    Some day I hope to get a proper answer on our motivation to do WinIE and MacIE in the first place. It seems to be that we were scared of not having control of the HTML standard. And indeed, now that Firefox is gaining traction, Microsoft has added more people to WinIE again.

    Epilogue: All of this made it a lot more easy for me to quit and go work at Google
    Reminder: I may or may not be leaving some parts out for NDA reasons.

    --
    (sig) The last bug isn't fixed until the last user is dead. (/sig)
  17. Re:I'm bummed. by pluggo · · Score: 5, Funny

    Maybe they disabled everything except IE for security reasons...

    *ducks*

    --
    Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny. Free men pull in all kinds of directions. It's the only way to mak
  18. We need an online db of IE-only corp. websites! by totro2 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Hi all,

    I keep hearing "my bank doesn't support firefox", or "The Gap doesn't support firefox". Which bank? Which banks in particular? What other retailers in particular? I want an online list I can refer to!

    Where is a webpage I can go to see the list of all the major corporations who develop IE-only websites? This way I can avoid patronizing them with my business altogether. It would save me the time of switching to other competitors (who do "get it") later. It would be nice if each entry in this online db also had a link beside it to where I (and others like me who "get it") can file my complaint about non-conformance to W3C strandards.

    If such a page existed and became common knowledge, no corporation in their right mind would want to be on such a list. This public badge of shame would prompt them to hire some real web developers, not loser IE-monopoly-developers who are impersonating real web developers.