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Internet Explorer 7 Beta 3 Reviewed

An anonymous reader writes to mention a review of the latest Beta release for Internet Explorer 7 on Paul Thurrott's SuperSite. From the article: "While it's not enough to make me switch from Firefox yet--I still love certain Firefox features such as inline search--it's no longer an object of ridicule either. IE 7.0 Beta 3 includes huge functional and security advantages of IE 6 and is an absolute no brainer for anyone choosing to stick with IE. If you are an IE user, head over to the Microsoft Web site and pick up IE 7.0 Beta 3 today." ZDNet has some first impressions of the release as well.

19 of 221 comments (clear)

  1. a finer compliment by yagu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    From the article (emphasis mine): "While it's not enough to make me switch from Firefox yet--I still love certain Firefox features such as inline search--it's no longer an object of ridicule either. "

    A finer compliment (no longer an object of ridicule) couldn't be had. This from Thurrott, a Microsoft sychophant. So, it's come to this, Microsoft feints and jabs, feints and jabs, and after ten years (more?) of internet browsing that's how high the bar is set for them. I can't wait for Vista.

    1. Re:a finer compliment by heinousjay · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, to be fair (since you said 10 years or more) there was a period of time from the release of IE 4 to the release of 5.5 that it was essentially the best browser available. It's only since development basically stopped that it has been trounced so hard.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    2. Re:a finer compliment by Bogtha · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Or, to put it another way, as long as there was viable competition, Microsoft continually improved their browser. When Internet Explorer achieved its objective of killing the competition, Microsoft cancelled development and left it to rot. Now there is viable competition again, Microsoft is scrambling to get back in the game.

      This is precisely why monopolies abusing their position to kill the competition is so harmful and why "it's a better product" is no defence.

      --
      Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
    3. Re:a finer compliment by vistic · · Score: 4, Funny

      i believe you meant "sycophant"... and not "sychophant", which is a crazy elephant... not to be confused with "psychopants" which were a 70's fad.

    4. Re:a finer compliment by malkavian · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There were a few browsers around in the 'Browser Wars' timeframe. The most common of which was Netscape. And Netscape was a 'Pay For' browser. In much the same way that Opera is now.
      Microsoft basically cut the rug from under that. By dumping a product with the OS. In '98 and beyond, everyone that bought a PC already had a browser in. By putting the cost of the browser in with the OS, you'd already paid to have IE with your machine. Netscape didn't have a look in. So, in other words to get Netscape, you'd have to buy two browsers (if you'd bought windows). First IE, which was paid for in the OS price, then adding Netscape on top (if you bought the properly licensed version).
      With revenues cut off at the knees, the company couldn't afford to throw money at research and development the way MS could (people were still buying Windows, so they were still selling browsers by default). So, the inevitable decline went on. As a company, you can't fight the bottomless purse (which is what MS had to fund their browser with, funding it from their profitable OS & Office side) who is dumping product for free.
      They killed Netscape the company stone dead. It was sold eventually for a fraction of what it was worth as an open market company in a competitive environment.
      And it's been languishing ever since.
      Firefox, as an open source project, and an incredibly successful one, can compete on price, as it doesn't require the kind of funding that Netscape did as a company.
      Opera does a good job of keeping it's brower around, but still, it's marginalised by MS having the browser in the OS, and also by Firefox. It's a hard fight to keep that running.
      MS killed a lot of things. Jobs, tax revenues, competition. And the other browsers. It wasn't a beating, it was scorched earth policy. Nothing survives (even their own browser stagnated, thus, marking the segment of the market as 'dead').
      But like all scorched earth, in time, shoots grow again, and eventually an ecosystem can develop once more (Firefox, Opera etc).
      We just see if MS gets to play the same cards again this time round.

    5. Re:a finer compliment by clontzman · · Score: 4, Informative

      And Netscape was a 'Pay For' browser. In much the same way that Opera is now.

      Netscape was licensed as a 'pay for' browser, but it was purely by license. Most people (and businesses) ran the freely downloadable version and very, very few people ever paid for Netscape (unless they bought it with a book). It's like saying that WinZip is a 'pay for' product -- what you're saying is factual, but in practice most people who use it aren't paying customers.

      Netscape's business model was to sell server software, not browsers. IIS and Apache did them more damage than IE did.

      Also, Opera's completely free now.

  2. How strange... by scgops · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...to see an article on /. saying something positive about a Microsoft product.

    I guess we'll start seeing flames any minute now...

  3. Not Feature Complete by Nicholas+Evans · · Score: 4, Informative

    IE7 may have all of the features Microsoft wanted it to have, but it still lacks reak XHTML support.

    They've had how many years to get their shit together, but we're still stuck with 'sorry, our implementation is a hack even though we helped write the standard, maybe you'll get THE BASIC FEATURES OF THE WORLD WIDE WEB implemented in 2015!

  4. Re:Anyone have by aymanh · · Score: 4, Funny
    Someone linked to this list in a previous discussion, one of my favorite quotes:

    Obviously, we have heard the feedback asking us to be more standards-compliant in our rendering behavior. We must balance this ask with the need of our customers (and end users) to have their pages not be broken. To find a balance we introduced a strict mode in IE6 that lets authors opt in into the more standards compliant rendering (and, if you're putting in a modern DOCTYPE declaration, you're being opted in automatically). Pages authored under non-strict mode (or "quirks mode") will not change behavior in IE7 - so the fixes we've done to be more CSS compliant won't appear under quirks mode.
    So wannabe web designers will still be able to create broken pages and get away with it on IE6 AND IE7.
    --
    python>>> q="'";s='q="%c";s=%c%s%c;print s%%(q,q,s,q)';print s%(q,q,s,q)
  5. Re:Anyone have by marcello_dl · · Score: 4, Funny

    Ha! I know the answer, it will have 100% support of:
    - Microsoft HTML(tm)
    - Microsoft CSS4(tm)
    - Microsoft XHTML(tm)
    - Microsoft XForms and ActiveX and other eXotic eXtensions.

    --
    ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
  6. No help for web developers by ecc962 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "If you are an IE user, head over to the Microsoft Web site and pick up IE 7.0 Beta 3 today."

    Except of course unless you're a web developer in which case you still need IE6 on your machine for testing those delightful CSS quirks and, as ever, you can't run two versions of IE on the same machine.

    It's odd. MS's developer tools are generally pretty good but they do seem to fall down a bit for those of us who write web applications, especially given the recent rise in far more complex scripting and so on with the whole Web 2.0 buzz / AJAX thing. Oh well.

  7. meh by ElephanTS · · Score: 5, Funny

    Can't wait to get my hands on tabbed browsing. It sounds really good.

    --
    spoonerize "magic trackpad"
  8. Re:News for nerds! Ahah by toriver · · Score: 4, Informative

    ACID2 test: It fails miserably, just like every other browser out there

    Except Konqueror, Safari and Opera 9.

  9. Re:News for nerds! Ahah by jZnat · · Score: 4, Informative

    Uh, Konqueror, Safari, and Opera all fully pass the Acid 2 test, and Firefox passes it on the reflow branch (a specific development branch). Thanks for playing.

    --
    'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
  10. Re:Anyone have by rtilghman · · Score: 5, Insightful


    I haven't tested Beta3, but without looking I can tell you that the standards support is relatively unchanged since Beta2. The CSS team for IE7 has stated, point blank, that virtually no further changes will be made to the engine on this front. A freaking catastrophe.

    Why is this a nightmare? In order to avoid unnecessary workarounds MS eliminated ALL (yes, ALL) the workarounds used by client side devs to solve the core issues with regard to how MS renders CSS and HTML. This includes things like the guillotene bug (where content and images inside a floated box just disappear enitely), etc. However, THEY DIDN'T FIX ANY OF THE BUGS.

    This means that we're now going to be headed back to the days when we have to render separately for different browsers, meaning XSLT is going to see a resurgence, costs are going to double, and folks are going to have to go back and recode all their existing apps so they render correctly in IE7.

    Welcome to the wonderful world of IE development. By incompetent retards, for incompetent retards, led by a visionary bonobo chimp.

    -rt

  11. Re:VALIDATE IT????? by nurb432 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Do you really think they care about feedback? They will just shove it down Windows user's throats anyway. the average person doesnt really have a choice.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  12. It breaks the new slashdot layout by melted · · Score: 4, Informative

    Installed it yesterday on my old Dell laptop. Turns out it breaks slashdot layout, sidebars to be exact. WTF? I thought it was supposed to have better support for CSS, not worse!

  13. Use FileMirrors to find download URLs by enosys · · Score: 5, Informative

    When a website wants you to go through a bunch of hoops like WGA to download a file there's often a very simple way around that. You can probably find the URL on FileMirrors. If it's something popular like an IE beta it'll probably be on the front page so you won't even have to search. Oh, and here's a link to IE7BETA3-WindowsXP-x86-enu.exe.

  14. Missing a crucial point by exKingZog · · Score: 5, Interesting

    People here have missed an important point: IE7 finally supports such basic CSS properties as position: fixed, min/max-width and fixes a few of the more annoying bugs; it also now supports PNG alpha transparency.

    Once IE7 becomes widely adopted, we can finally start USING some of these features without worrying about them not being compatible with IE. We need to encourage people to upgrade, and if they won't upgrade to Firefox or Opera, then at least they can upgrade to IE7 and give us an easier time developing web pages.

    --
    "If he were a plant, people would roll him up and smoke him."