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Quiz Microsoft's IE Team Leader

About as timely an interview as you can get: Microsoft released Internet Explorer 7 last week, and today we're gathering questions for IE team general manager Dean Hachamovitch. As usual, please follow Slashdot interview rules when posting or moderating questions. We'll publish Dean's answers verbatim as soon as he replies.

38 of 414 comments (clear)

  1. How about this... by also-rr · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Would you like to make available IE on other operating systems?

    1. Re:How about this... by AKAImBatman · · Score: 5, Interesting

      IE used to be available on Solaris, HP-UX, and Mac OS 9/X. Microsoft dropped support for all of those platforms. Considering that my attempts to install IE on Solaris 8 caused the CDE profile to be corrupted, I'm not sure that the lack of support is a bad thing. At the time, I found it more useful and reliable to build Mozilla nightlies.

  2. CSS by Beuno · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why did you go half way implementing CSS instead of fully supporting standards all other browsers have for some time now.

    1. Re:CSS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Does the IE roadmap include at any point 100% W3C compatibility, or are there features in the standard that you do not ever intend on supporting?

    2. Re:CSS by Admin_Jason · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Throwing percentages and numbers around are dangerous questions that will either not be moderated up or even if they are, and they are selected for questioning to IE developers, will likely be dismissed as arbitrary. It's better to ask in terms of generalities, so my suggestion would be something along the lines of the following:

      Browser comeptition is likely to continue in the marketplace, and as such, the feature sets of browsers will vary in order to appeal to a certain user base. Firefox has become something of the de facto standard for developers, to the extent that many web designers follow the practice of "design with FF in mind" while adding scripting and such to correct for what are commonly referred to as IE tweaks. Given this environment, there are 5 germane questions to ask:

      1. Does the Microsoft vision for IE7 place it in comeptition with Firefox as the browser of choice for developers?

      2. If so, what feature sets will IE7 have that can compete with Firefox and the open source community, and will those features include increased recognition and compliance with W3C standards?

      3. Often times I find myself opening IE for simply Microsoft functions that I otherwise cannot do in my browser of choice. Will cross-based browser support ever occur for common Microsoft functions like Windows and Office updates?

      4. As IE7 goes public as an update for those in a post-Windows 2000 environment, are there plans to make this upgrade available for businesses that still rely on those features of the Windows 2000 family of clients and servers?

      5. Finally, as some businesses rely on certain functionalities embedded in IE6 that are no longer there in IE7, are there plans to allow for dual instances of IE6 and IE7 in the future to allow for software and program compatability for businesses and their 3rd party vendors?

      --
      Just another nameless binary in a crowd of 1's and 0's
    3. Re:CSS by Aqualung812 · · Score: 5, Interesting
      4. As IE7 goes public as an update for those in a post-Windows 2000 environment, are there plans to make this upgrade available for businesses that still rely on those features of the Windows 2000 family of clients and servers?

      Please add this one to the list if the others do not make it. I still do not understand ignoring W2k support with Firefox breathing down Microsoft's neck.

      So I can buy new hardware and new OS in order to get anti-phishing and tab support, or I can download Firefox for free???

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
  3. Evil Plan? by dsginter · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As someone who has developed for multiple browsers, it really seems like there is a secret ploy at Microsoft to keep IE relatively incompatible with other browsers.

    Is this purposeful? If not, what is the reason?

    --
    More
  4. IE's design goals by Tet · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I've seen it mentioned (by Chris Wilson, amongst others) that IE7 was never going to pass the ACID2 tests when it shipped. Although as a web developer, that's not a situation I'm particularly pleased about, I'm mostly OK with it. I can appreciate that some aspects of the browsing experience will be propritized above others. However, I don't think I've ever seen a clear statement from Microsoft that 100% HTML and CSS compliance is even a goal. Can you comment on that?

    Is it your goal to render a standards compliant website correctly in all cases, or are you just aiming to implement those parts of the spec that are used by the majority of your customers? Naturally, I can understand prioritizing the things that are hitting your customers above those that are rarely used in the real world, but part of the reason the some of them aren't used in the real world is down to lack of browser support. I find it incredibly frustrating that some of my site layouts have to be butchered just to get them to work in the commonly used browsers. If IE fails to render a compliant page according to the spec, can you commit to actively tracking it as a bug with a view to fixing it in a future release of IE, even if it only affects a handful of people?

    --
    "The invisible and the non-existent look very much alike." -- Delos B. McKown
  5. A question by also-rr · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Would you like to see a universal architecture so that all rendering engines* worked in all web browsers, and all plugins** worked with all rendering engines? *Gecko, mshtml etc **Free and non-free - flash, mplayer and the like

    1. Re:A question by jonasj · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There is such a standard for plugins, and Opera, Safari, Konqueror and all Mozilla-based browsers support it. Microsoft used to support it, but an update included in SP 2 for IE 5.5 removed support in favor of their own ActiveX-based plugin architecture, hoping that the added work needed to maintain two versions of their plugins would cause plugin makers to drop support for other browsers than IE. Who said abuse of monopoly power?

      --
      You know, Microsoft's street address also says a lot about their mentality.
  6. Interface by techmuse · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The new version of IE makes it much harder to work with certain critical aspects of the browser. While I like some aspects of the new browser, some of the interface changes make it much more difficult to work with, and this will keep me firmly in the Firefox camp for now. For example, bookmarks now require many more clicks to access, especially if you use links nested in folders. Also, most interface elements can not be moved around as was previously possible (and is currently possible in Firefox.) The menu bar itself is hidden, and when exposed, appears in the middle of the browser controls! Why go to so much trouble to make essential elements of the program difficult for users to access?

  7. Standardized Compliance Tests by justinbach · · Score: 5, Interesting

    How important is it to Microsoft to ensure that IE passes acknowledged tests of compliane (i.e. Acid2) at the cost of sacrificing newer and possibly more exciting/efficient proprietary technologies?

    --
    I left my wallet in El Sigundo!
  8. Best/Future Features by x_MeRLiN_x · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What are the best features of IE7 that sets it above the competition, what features are perhaps lacking and are you currently working on adding these?

  9. My Question by B3ryllium · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Well, I can't think of a real Slashdot-headed question to ask, so I'll go for the entertaining rather than socially relevant:

    Presumably, throughout this development process for IE7, your team has had their nose to the grind-wheel, so to speak. What sort of things did you do to chill out and relax? Were there any in-office perks, like pool tables or whatnot? And were you actually all in the same office, or did some members of the team have to telecommute from far-off lands, like Oregon?

  10. IE7 release time by BeeBeard · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why did IE7 take such a long time to release after IE6?

  11. DOM 2 Events by AKAImBatman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    One of the stated purposes of IE7 was to better support the W3C standards, and (presumably) to increase compatibility among W3C-compliant browsers. Yet despite multiple requests for DOM 2 Events support, the IE team decided to overlook this support. Currently, IE is the only major browser lacking DOM Events support. Which is a major issue, as IE's attachEvent() design means that special code must be written for IE compatibility.

    As someone who's been forced into using runtime patches (example) to increase IE's compatibility with DHTML code, I feel compelled to ask: Why has the IE team ignored this critical standard?

  12. Simple questions by Billosaur · · Score: 5, Interesting

    IE has a dominating command of the market, although Firefox is slowly making inroads, due to innovations such as tabbed browsing that IE has had to incorporate to maintain that command. But where are the IE innovations? Why can't the IE team get ahead of the curve on Firefox? Is there anything you consider an innovation that is unique to IE that would plausibly be something the browser market would have to incorporate to stay competitive?

    --
    GetOuttaMySpace - The Anti-Social Network
  13. Why ditch platform conventions by linuxci · · Score: 5, Interesting
    One of the biggest complaints about IE7 is that it does not obey the standard user interface guidelines for Windows XP. As an update that'll be pushed to users automatically next month do you not consider it a bad idea to break platform conventions?


    There is a workaround that involves editing the registry to get the menu bar in the correct place but why is this not implemented as part of toolbar customisation?

  14. Microsoft jisallim aklak by BeeBeard · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What do you make of all this pro-Firefox, anti-IE digital jihadism?

  15. IE7 + Win2k by TubeSteak · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why haven't you guys hacked IE7 to run on Win2k minus the WinXP SP2-dependant security features?

    It's not like it'd be any less secure than IE6 on Win2k.

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
  16. How much of SpyGlass is left in IE7? by HaeMaker · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As I recall, Microsoft licensed SpyGlass browser code as the basis for Internet Explorer. Is there any of it left, or have you finally rewritten all the IE code?

  17. Now that transparency and CSS is fully implemented by Bromskloss · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...when will you come to SVG?

    --
    Swedish plasma phys. PhD student; MSc EE; knows maths, programming, electronics; finance interest; seeks opportunities
  18. My shot by Njovich · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What do you consider the greatest weakness of Firefox?

  19. IE 8 by diegocgteleline.es · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A simple question: What are you planning to implement for the next IE version, be it IE 8 or IE 7.5 or whatever?

  20. Does this mark a faster release cycle? by Control+Group · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I realize, of course, that any answer you give to this question may not be valid a couple years down the road, but as of now:

    Does the release of IE7 mark the beginning of a more aggressive development/release cycle for Internet Explorer? That is, we are all aware of various aspects of CSS, for example, that are not currently supported in IE (though kudos on all the progress in this direction you've made): can we expect updates to IE, either as service packs, point releases, or new versions, that will provide better standards support in the relatively near future? Or will we be limited to security fixes for the foreseeable future, as with IE6?

    --

    Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
  21. IE7 and Vista by epuidokas · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Did any new Windows Vista technologies influence the development of IE7?

  22. Follow up by LordEd · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you had more time, is there a new feature you would have liked to include in IE7?

  23. Security by Seto89 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    One of IE7's revolutionary features was supposed to be security, although it took less than 24 hours for Secunia to post an advisory about a security hole. Moreover, the bug seemed to be carried over from as early as IE5.5. What approach did you take to improve browser's security, and how come the vulnerabilities have been carried over?

    --
    There are two kinds of people - those who are radioactive and those who have already decayed..
  24. pro Open Source != anti-Microsoft .. by rs232 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "A better question: Are you aware that no matter what answers you give here, they will never satisfy the anti-Microsoft Slashdot crowd?"

    Why do you assume that pro Open Source equates with anti-Microsoft

    was Re:CSS

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
  25. How about this.... by Toreo+asesino · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Let's pretend for a moment that Internet Explorer isn't the default web-browser built into Windows and instead, users are presented with a choice on first login (e.g. a message asking 'How would you like to browse the internet? MSIE, Firefox, Opera').

    Would you expect IE to become as dominant as it is now if users had to specifically choose it over another?

    Ignoring the slight impracticalities, if so (I'm guessing you do), on what basis would this be?

    --
    throw new NoSignatureException();
  26. how does microsoft choose which CSS/DOM to add? by jonwil · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How does microsoft choose which bits of the CSS and DOM standard to implement?

  27. DOJ Antitrust Settlement by KJSwartz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    While upgrading to IE7, I noticed that IE6 had to be removed before Windows could install IE7. Does this mean that Internet Explorer is not so tightly bundled into Microsoft/OS that it can not be removed in the name of competition? Also, is the complete IE7 API available for license and fee-free?

  28. Browser integration by solevita · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We've been told in the past that the reason that IE was so deeply embedded (to the point that it could not be removed, as we were told) in to the operating system was to improve the online experience of a Windows PC. With Web 2.0 firmly in place, the desire for a web browser integrated in to the operating system is, some would say, greater than ever.

    Where do you stand on this issue? How central to the XP and Vista experience will IE7 become?

  29. IE 7+ by wwrafter · · Score: 4, Interesting

    First, thank you for the efforts the team has already put in. I'm pretty sure that the two features that will provide the biggest benefit to developers, and by extension the users, namely better CSS (hopefully some CSS3) support and moving to the W3 standard event model, will be addressed in the next version of IE. My two part question: Do you have any ETA on the next version, and is there any possibility of adding pieces to IE7 via Windows Update? I recognize changing the event model is not really an option here, but adding support for say border-radius or opacity css support seems like it would be a fairly innocuous change.

  30. Teaching others about new features in IE7. by srothroc · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You have implemented a new GUI and new security features; these have been examined, praised, and lambasted on just about every tech site out there, so those of us "in the know" are aware of all of the changes and their implications. You also have resources like the quick reference sheet available to help new users of IE7. These are all well and good, but they'll be of no use to anyone who does not know about them or how to use them.

    What I want to know is this: how will you spread word of the new changes and features to neighbor Joe or Grandma Smith -- will you rely on word-of-mouth from the technocracy, or do you trust that your features are transparent enough that they will easily understand the difference between, say, types of SSL certificates provided by sites?

  31. Project Management? by RingDev · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What type of project management processes and structures did you impliment in order to keep the vast number of people and resources invovled with this project in line? How do you feel about those processes now that it's done, and what would you have done differently?

    -Rick

    --
    "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
  32. Does microsoft have plans for an IE feedback form? by jonwil · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Does microsoft have plans for an IE feedback form similar to what they have now for Visual Studio?
    Having such a feedback form would mean that people could post things like "Support " or "Fix issue where adds an extra pixel to the border" or whatever and then the IE team could investigate them (just like the Visual Studio team does with the Visual Studio feedback) and provide feedback such as "no, we cant fix this at this time" or "we will consider this for the next release" or "we have investigated this and have a fix already" or "here is a workaround" or whatever else it is. If there was a vote system so people can vote for what they think is important, microsoft could use that information to see how many people want which features (and therefore which features it makes the most sense to implement).

  33. Why develop IE at all by CmdrGravy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Given that you are not planning on selling IE 7 and the fact that there are already other browsers on the market which can allow Windows users to experience the web fully why is Microsoft investing so much time and effort in continuing the development of IE ?