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Auto Install of IE 7 Delayed In Japan

filenavigator writes "Microsoft has delayed the automatic install of IE 7 in Japan. There's an an interesting response in one of the MSDN blogs. IT pros are saying that they have done this because business users asked it to be delayed. It seems to me many business users here in North America wanted it to be delayed as well, but were forced to scramble and deploy IE 7 blocking software. This looks like more proof that the IE 7 automatic push was more for marketing reasons, than security. If it were a security issue, than why wait on the Japanese push?" Does anyone know the 'technical' reason that the autoinstall was delayed?

201 comments

  1. totally not front page worthy by mack+knife · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Why is this on the front page? Because there may, possibly, theoretically, be some angle that makes Microsoft look bad? ZOMG!!@@!

    1. Re:totally not front page worthy by pilgrim23 · · Score: 1

      Our business relys on our page. It worked fine for many functions on Firefox (and Camino), Opera, IE 6, Safari, and others. It breaks in two important aspects on IE 7. I am no html expert to know why, I just know the bill pament function ain't workin and that DOES effect business. Thanks Redmond!

      --
      - Minutus cantorum, minutus balorum, minutus carborata descendum pantorum.
    2. Re:totally not front page worthy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So why didn't you test with the RC and fix it?

    3. Re:totally not front page worthy by Tdawgless · · Score: 0

      You would think that bill gates has an account and wouldn't have to post as anonymous coward. :|

    4. Re:totally not front page worthy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe that function was coded with old IE bugs in mind, so it breaks now that IE is getting (somewhat) fixed?

    5. Re:totally not front page worthy by jacksonj04 · · Score: 1

      Chances are your web team coded in a couple of IE6-specific hacks to make it work. Now that IE7 is a lot closer to spec, the site is still feeding it the hacked code and IE7 is going "WTF is this shit?".

      You just need to get the team to take out the IE hacks for an IE7 user-agent string.

      --
      How many people can read hex if only you and dead people can read hex?
    6. Re:totally not front page worthy by Nataku564 · · Score: 1

      Because IE7 is closed source and we can't fix it.

  2. IE7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yeah because it took half an hour to install and then refused to work, had to revert back to IE6 :o(

  3. Oh. My. God. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Zonk, seriously babe. You do realize that you don't have to leave the submissions in an utterly unintelligible form as submitted right?

    1. Re:Oh. My. God. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The learning curve must'vemade you slide like an SUV in third grade. This is not illegible.

  4. Different countries has different situations by 3770 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Oh come on, it isn't always black or white.

    It is very possible that Microsoft wants IE7 to be installed for security reasons, and that there are no reasons that are important enough to outweigh that in the U.S. But lets say for example, that the language support in IE7 is broken for Japanese in some weird and newly discovered way, and that a large portion of Japanese web sites don't function properly.

    So, see? While the security situation is the same in all countries, other issues may not.

    --
    The Internet is full. Go Away!!!
    1. Re:Different countries has different situations by tomhudson · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The "security reason" is Microsoft's financial security. Firefox is showing people that IE is one more piece of the Microsoft software stack they can do without.

      Once they discover openoffice, most of them won't need Windows except as a gaming box - and the Wii looks more interesting to a lot of people.

    2. Re:Different countries has different situations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A senior productive manager of Windows in Microsoft Japan clearly stated that the delay was made for the marketing reason. They got hundreds of complaints from many *corporate* customers after the push of WinXP SP2 from. Well, at least they can learn, sometimes.

      For those who can read Japanese, here's the link to a related article.

    3. Re:Different countries has different situations by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


      It's also not always Microsoft's fault. I work in the NHS an in Primary Care (GP surgeries amongst others), many places are under strict orders to block the upgrade because clinical software has been written in such a way that it works only with IE6. And there is also the issue that vital software hasn't passed conformence testing with the new version, yet.

      It's pretty piss poor that the third party software is so non-standards compliant that this is the case, but, and I say this as someone without a Windows machine in her house, it's hardly Microsoft's fault.

      Are they just trying shit stir with this story or what?

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    4. Re:Different countries has different situations by alchemy101 · · Score: 1

      I too thought it might have been a language support problem. It could be perhaps a documentation problem?

    5. Re:Different countries has different situations by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

      Office 2000 may be better than OpenOffice. But Office 2003 is such crap that OpenOffice easily beats it. Actually, I think 2000 is pretty much the best release of all Microsoft's stuff.

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    6. Re:Different countries has different situations by potHead42 · · Score: 1
      It's also not always Microsoft's fault. I work in the NHS an in Primary Care (GP surgeries amongst others), many places are under strict orders to block the upgrade because clinical software has been written in such a way that it works only with IE6. And there is also the issue that vital software hasn't passed conformence testing with the new version, yet.
      Wait a minute... clinical software written for IE6? It already scares me when I hear about critical stuff running on Windows, but this is absolutely horrible! Please tell me at least the backend runs on something more trustworthy...
    7. Re:Different countries has different situations by kryten_nl · · Score: 1

      Please tell me at least the backend runs on something more trustworthy...

      The thoroughly tested Window 95. Does that put your mind at ease?

      --
      For the perfect anti-Unix, write an OS that thinks it knows what you're doing better than you do and let it be wrong.
    8. Re:Different countries has different situations by TheSeer2 · · Score: 1

      Says he who hath an anti-microsoft sig.

    9. Re:Different countries has different situations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It is very possible that Microsoft wants IE7 to be installed for security reasons, and that there are no reasons that are important enough to outweigh that in the U.S. But lets say for example, that the language support in IE7 is broken for Japanese in some weird and newly discovered way, and that a large portion of Japanese web sites don't function properly."

      You're going on faith there as nothing is proven.

      There were WMDs in Iraq so we had to go in, honest guv! ;)

      Same logic.

    10. Re:Different countries has different situations by laffer1 · · Score: 1

      Funny, I think that Office 2003 is better than 2000 especially after supporting both. OpenOffice isn't that good, but there are only a few open source office productivity suites available. People like it because its one of the best pieces of software in that genre that is free. That does not make it good. Personally, I'd rather use Apple Pages or Mac Office 2004 for word processing than anything else. The real problem is that open office, word perfect and a slew of other apps tried to duplicate office 97 or 2000's appearance. Some suites are moving away from that, but I find it irritating. If it is going to look like office, it better damn well be identical. Every feature better act the same and be in the same place. If they can't do that, then make it feel unique. I'd rather use lotus smartsuite which looks like crap but works ok than to try to use something that is a wannabe MS product. I feel the same way about KDE although I have to say KDE works well. I also say this as someone trying to create a GNUstep based desktop system. My intention is to give it a unique gui eventually but at first it will suffer from what I described above. At least I admit I am doing a wannabe product,

    11. Re:Different countries has different situations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I worked in an NHS IT department. Patient data was handled over non-encrypted browser sessions to backend systems written in ASP VB with gaping sql injection mechanisms. We also had a wireless lan with no WEP on it. I brought these to the IT head's attention. I don't work there any more. The network manager who put in the wireless does, as does the guy who coded the web applications. Go figure.

    12. Re:Different countries has different situations by Ethan+Allison · · Score: 1

      You obviously haven't seen the 2007 beta.

    13. Re:Different countries has different situations by dfgchgfxrjtdhgh.jjhv · · Score: 1

      97 was the best release of ms office

    14. Re:Different countries has different situations by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      So wait, Japanese businesses complain, they get delayed. American businesses complain, they get told to go fuck themselves? Sounds like what the summary said.

    15. Re:Different countries has different situations by rts008 · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't get too enthusiastic just yet.

      Just to satisfy my curiosity, I read some of the posts at the linked to blogs.msdn.com, and you have people like this koolaidaholic to contend with:
      (http://blogs.msdn.com/ie/archive/2006/11/02/first -wave-of-localized-ie7-releases-now-available.aspx )

      "re: First Wave of Localized IE7 Releases Now Available
      Thursday, November 02, 2006 3:20 PM by Omar A.Perez

      I feel bad I have been such a pest you guys. I really do prefer IE7 to FireFox after using it for the last few days. I apologize for all the trouble I have caused in these forums.

      The Microsoft way is clearly the best way and we should not forget it."

      Just for the record, I'm with you- I'm running FC5/KDE w/Firefox (or Konqueror-don't matter much to me) because the last time I had to re-install XP, MS decided all of a sudden my retail Pro was pirated, the WGA spyware, activation, etc. just got to be too much of a hassle.

      My only gripe is ATI's Linux driver support. :-(

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    16. Re:Different countries has different situations by Douglas+Goodall · · Score: 1

      I am not sure why you are badmouthing OpenOffice. OpenOffice is CUA (Common User Access) compliant. That means it has the main menus you expect and that the File mennu has an exit/quit option. Beyond the basic look and feel issues, it is not necessary for Open Office to be an exact knock off. If it were, Microsoft would have a case when we stood back and squinted. I would prefer that Open Office was "better" and I don't mind learning a few differences in the menus. It's a lot better than re-learning everything with the new office suite. The same for Linux look and feel. I would prefer that the CUA guidelines get followed but beyond that I don't want it to look exactly like Windows. What's the point. I like Better.

    17. Re:Different countries has different situations by cnettel · · Score: 1

      That was the last one that really corrupted my documents badly. It was a rather significant rewrite from the 95 suite. The range up to 2003 contains minor tweaks, and I've never found a reason to prefer a previous release in that series, unless performance/workset size has been a real issue. On the other hand, one line of improvement that won't affect U.S. users is the overall quality of the non-English lingual resources, where some very significant improvements have been made(/acquired) for some languages.

    18. Re:Different countries has different situations by cheater512 · · Score: 1

      I wouldnt be too sure about that. Office 97 gives it a good run for its money. ;)

    19. Re:Different countries has different situations by FractalZone · · Score: 1

      Get real!

      Microsoft is NOT concerned about the stability or security of your system that is running a Windoze OS. MS only cares about extracting as much money from you as it can before its "house of cards" OS collapses in the face of real flaws and security threats and some FOSS OS (Ubuntu anyone?) becomes the new default. Why else would MS be siding with SuSe and/or Novell? As a rule, MS goes against your best interests.

      --
      "You're young, you're drunk, you're in bed, you have knives; shit happens." -- Angelina Jolie
    20. Re:Different countries has different situations by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


      It's not the main body of the clinical systems themselves, so you don't need to worry about that side of things (at least not because of IE6). It's the parts that link the system into the new centralised databases. And no doctors actually want that, so quite frankly, the longer it takes to get it working, the better, IMNSHO.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    21. Re:Different countries has different situations by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1
      I worked in an NHS IT department. Patient data was handled over non-encrypted browser sessions to backend systems written in ASP VB with gaping sql injection mechanisms. We also had a wireless lan with no WEP on it. I brought these to the IT head's attention. I don't work there any more. The network manager who put in the wireless does, as does the guy who coded the web applications. Go figure.


      It hasn't entirely improved. The standard defenses when pointing out this sort of stuff are: it's over NHSnet (a "private" intranet containing thousands of practices and hundreds of hospitals, as well as miscellaneous users such as doctors working from home, and univeristy research departments), and that only approved users who operate under strict confidentiality agreements, i.e. every receptionist at every general practice in the country who signed a scrap of paper when they joined.

      But the biggest threats to privacy, surprisingly, are not I.T. issues. It's deliberate government policy to annex the private records between doctors and their patients. Surgeries will be forced into handing over these records and have already had demographic information taken without their consent. A brief overview here. I've been working with this system and I exaggerate not at all when I say it's a disaster and riddled with corruption.

      Something you can do about this, if you're a UK citizen, is here. And for your own good and all of ours, I sincerely recommend that you do.
      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    22. Re:Different countries has different situations by QuietLagoon · · Score: 1

      It may also be that fact that in the US, the Justice Department caved in to Microsoft during the anti-trust legalities. However, over in Asia, Microsoft's illegal practices are looked at somewhat more closely, and the governments there are less inclined to allow the illegal leveraging of a monopoly to continue unchecked. So Microsoft has to remain on its best behaviour.

    23. Re:Different countries has different situations by godefroi · · Score: 1

      If someone's already moved on to a different browser, how will automatically installing IE7 affect them?

      IE7 may even be installed on some of my boxes, but I wouldn't know...

      --
      Karma: Poor (Mostly affected by lame karma-joke sigs)
  5. First post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First post muthafuckers !@1!!!!!!!!!

    1. Re:First post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you meant: First Muthafuckers' post!

  6. Automatic installation of a different browser? by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

    Wait a minute, is ie7 100% backwards compatible with ie6? I seem to recall it isn't. Then, how can Microsoft push it in updates? what about people relaying on the browser for intranet web apps that can break?

    --
    ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    1. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by York+the+Mysterious · · Score: 3, Funny

      It's not backwards compatible and this breaks a lot of Intranet sites. My Univerity (shitty Humboldt State University in CA) uses a system (being phases out) called Banner for managing class registration, payments and just about everything else you could imagine. There's been lots of problems in the latest and greatest banner with IE 7. It's going to be very interesting to see if these problems cause any large scale issues come registration time. There's also been issues with Universities not using the latest and greatest version of Cisco's Clean Access network management software. Any student with IE 7 installed are unable to gain access to the Internet at school's employing those version of Clean Access. That's been lots of fun as admins at those schools are creating exceptions left and right and at this point are probably just turning Clean Access off until they can deploy the latest version. Wells Fargo isn't working with IE 7. I had a wonderful conversation with a buddy of mine that works at their online banking call center. She wants to kill Microsoft right now. There are plenty of problems all over the place.

      --

      Tim Smith - Ramblings from Nerd Land
    2. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by MustardMan · · Score: 1

      Lots and lots of colleges use banner to manage all things electronic... this is the first time I've heard about it breaking in IE7, but I haven't really followed it. At my undergrad school, banner did a pretty good job of breaking all by itself, no matter what browser you used.

    3. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You blame Microsoft for upgrading their browser, but the reason that the sites are breaking is because IE7 is much more standards compliant. Developers all over (including myself) rant on endlessly about IE6's horrid standards compliance, and I for one am happy to know that the work I put into making all sites I worked on function in *all* browsers has paid off. Anyone who was still building exclusively for IE6 in the last couple of years will now have to pay for their foolish and shortsighted mistake. If the site doesn't work in IE7, does it work in FireFox, Opera or any remotely standards compliant browser?

      Plus, wouldn't you rather see users forced to upgrade to a more standards compliant browser so that developers can almost immediately move away from having to put large ammounts of support for IE6 in their code?

    4. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      Well this is exactly the problem. Even well done web apps can misbehave with a new version of an incompatible browser. So what about those sticking to poorly coded ones?

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    5. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by k12linux · · Score: 1

      Our accounting software vendor warned us last month that we had to block IE7 because the web interface to accounts (which is heavily used here) breaks utterly even though they use MS libraries and components to make it from what I understand.

    6. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Latrobe University in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia issued an email to all 12,000 of its students telling them NOT to install the latest IE7 because their website wouldn't be compatable with it.

    7. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by goofyheadedpunk · · Score: 1

      > She wants to kill Microsoft right now.

      Microsoft probably did this just to fuck with your friend's mind. She is a most powerful Admin, after all.

      SCENE: Your friend and Microsoft are standing in Microsoft's office. Your friend has her light saber drawn in an offensive stance while Microsoft stands rather tensly in front of your friend. Microsoft's fear is carefully hidden. Its back is to your friend.

      WF_ADMIN: I won't be a pawn in your political game. Wells Fargo is my family.

      MICROSOFT: Only through me can you achieve a power greater than any Admin. Learn to know the dark side of the Source, Admin, and you will be able to save your banking application from certain death.

      WF_ADMIN: What did you say?

      MICROSOFT: Use my browser, I beg you . . .

      WF_ADMIN: You're a convicted monopilist!

      MICROSOFT: I know what has been troubling you . . . Listen to me. Don't continue to be a pawn of Wells Fargo! Ever since I've known you, you've been searching for a life greater than that of an ordinary Admin . . . a life of significance, of conscience.

      WF_ADMIN: You're wrong!

      MICROSOFT: Are you going to kill me?

      WF_ADMIN: I would certainly like to.

      MICROSOFT: I know you would. I can feel your anger. It gives you focus, makes you stronger.

      (In case anyone is curious, no, I didn't need to look up the script. Yes, it's sick. And, yes, I know that Anakin ignites his saber after "You're a Sith Lord!", not before. Yes, that's sick too.)

      --

      What if the entire Universe were a chrooted environment with everything symlinked from the host?
    8. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      > ...breaks utterly even though they use MS libraries and components to make it
      > from...

      "Even though"? You write that as if you are suprised.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    9. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by linebackn · · Score: 1

      And this is another good reason why any and every web site or web "app" must be compatible with more than one browser. IE fails? So what, fire up Firefox!

      One of the main goals of making "Web apps" is to free yourself from proprietary APIs and environments. If you make an IE only app then you might as well have just made a Win32 app. With Firefox in the mix your web "app" can run on Windows, Linux, Mac, Solaris, BeOS, OS/2, and more!

      I hope for the sake of all that is good that these IE only sites that are having problems with IE 7 will finally see the light and upgrade their sites so they work in both IE, Firefox, and hopefully any other major browser.

      The hard cold reality is that the web is an ever changing, volital environment. Unfortunately business have become complacent since IE 6 never changed and for a long time it was essentially dead. They thought they could ignore the web moving on, but now it has bitten them in the butts.

      I used to warn people about this kind of thing. In this day and age only a moron would make an IE only site. Unfortunately there seems to be no short supply of morons.

    10. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by Douglas+Goodall · · Score: 1

      I am fscinated they were so eager to compete with the Firefox release that they pushed it in the update channel. My, they are full of themselves aren't they?

    11. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Then why are all these sites are also mostly broken in other browsers? Fact is, IE7 is a whole new standard, close but not quite what Firefox, Opera, etc. use, and not even compatible with the psuedo-standard that is IE6. What a mess.

    12. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by suv4x4 · · Score: 1

      Wells Fargo isn't working with IE 7. I had a wonderful conversation with a buddy of mine that works at their online banking call center. She wants to kill Microsoft right now. There are plenty of problems all over the place.

      THIS is the things savvy web devs were warning the rest of the world all these years: write bad code and it'll bite you in fuhture browser versions.

      You know 90% of the problems are caused because of horrid coding that has become as some sort of established practice on intranet and even many internet sites. I have over a hundred sites created before I ever heard of IE7. When I got IE7 to test them, I was shocked to find it all operates just the same, despite all FUD spread left and right.

      I didn't use "html>body" hacks or any of the sort that were obvious to break in future versions of IE, nor I used deprecated API's. I *do* use proper DTD which in makes IE7 use all its new features (vs its compatibility mode).

      Even a full-blown AJAX shopping solution I wrote few years ago: it just works on IE7. What gives? Why am I not seeing terrible things happen to my code?

      Now's the time good coding practices and bad coding practices really start to be apparent.

    13. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by A+Friendly+Troll · · Score: 1

      It's not sick, and you have nothing to be ashamed of. It just shows that you have a very good memory and pay attention to details.

    14. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      I blame the upgrade being forced down your throat not the upgrade itself. Geez.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    15. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      "Wait a minute, is ie7 100% backwards compatible with ie6? I seem to recall it isn't. Then, how can Microsoft push it in updates? what about people relaying on the browser for intranet web apps that can break?"

      its not the first time a microsoft update has broken existing applications, under the excuse of 'better security'.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    16. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by goofyheadedpunk · · Score: 1

      That, or I've watched Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith damn near 30 times.

      --

      What if the entire Universe were a chrooted environment with everything symlinked from the host?
    17. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A random anecdotal data point. I work in IT security, and 'availability' comes under my remit (I have decided this, and one of the good things about the company is that this is fine.) Anyway, I brought the upcoming MSIE7 push-install up internally a couple of weeks ago, with a mail to the head of the web group responsible for a couple of extranet sites (for business partners and customers), the public www.example.com site, and some line-of-business apps on the intranet. Silence. When I heard the download had already gone up on Windows Update I followed up a bit more urgently with the IT dept manager and a couple of his alpha-PFYs. Consensus was that it'll break quite a lot of stuff quite badly - amusingly, including the HR app for booking holidays and leave. However, although this has been communicated up the hierarchy, no-one seems to be doing anything about it. We informally decided that it's time to stop pulling management's arse out of the fire with absurd overtime to cover for bad decision making, and we're just gonna let everything break. We've done what we can. Well, I say nothing - we might make sure we have the Firefox installer mirrored on the LAN, and have a few dozen CDs burned. And we'll make sure everyone's clear that it's Microsoft that broke everything. Result - I hope - we'll finally be able to officially bump everyone off MSIE onto Firefox, a big security win and something I've been pissing into the wind about up to now.

    18. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by Iaughter · · Score: 1
      ... My Univerity (shitty Humboldt State University in CA) ...

      Tim,
      Some IT staff at Humbolt contribute quite a bit to the open source course management system Moodle. Using some of their modules and contributed code is my only introduction to Humbolt, but from the quality and effort they put into their Moodle stuff, I suspect that your negative comment is more driven from college-age angst and and juvenile antiestablishmentarianism.

    19. Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... My Univerity (shitty Humboldt State University in CA)

      In defense of my alma mater, I graduated from Humboldt about 20 years ago. At that time it was considered a good undergraduate school. The preparation I recieved during the four years I attended Humboldt State University served me well as I went through a very demanding graduate program and still helps me today in my capacity as a professor at one of the largest private universities in the U.S. It seems that attending Humboldt hasn't hurt my career. Indeed, when told that I studied there, many of my colleagues have mentioned their positive experiences with Humboldt State, including: attending research conferences held at HSU, having family members or friends that have studied at HSU, and academic interactions with HSU faculty. I have never been embarrassed by my association with HSU.

        --- "There's been lots of problems" ---"There's also been issues" ---"Any student with IE 7 installed are unable" ---"at school's employing those version "

      Judging from your unique ability to invent new words ("Univerity" -- a single truth perhaps? ) and your gutsy, avante garde approach to the English language, your academic abilities may well fall outside the bounds with which Humboldt State can deal.

  7. There's a bazillion reasons why IE7 is pushed by Shados · · Score: 1

    Yes, marketting is one of the reasons. Security is however, another one (is the browser perfect? HELL NO! Is it better than IE6? HELL YEAH). The main one, in my opinion, is to get rid of IE6 as quickly as humanly possible. And this, the slashdot crowd, especialy the ones who do commercial web design, should appreciate it. Freagin FUD. Yes, Microsoft is evil blah blah blah: Doesn't change anything. The internet will benifit from being rid of IE6, even if it means another IE replacing it.

  8. No I don't! by bogaboga · · Score: 5, Funny
    Does anyone know the 'technical' reason that the autoinstall was delayed?

    Answer: No I don't!

    Disclaimer: I do not know what I am talking about.

    1. Re:No I don't! by micpp · · Score: 1

      The question wasn't whether you knew, it was whether anyone knew. In which case the answer is yes, since presumably the people responsible for delaying it have some reasoning.

    2. Re:No I don't! by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      Don't post that disclaimer again! If you do, it'll start appearing in 90% of /. posts!

      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
  9. Easy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Does anyone know the 'technical' reason that the autoinstall was delayed?"

    Moderate this post as Flamebait.

  10. This concerns a lot of Japanese people. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I take it you're an American, so you likely don't know where Japan is, let alone how many people live there. The July 2006 estimate from your own CIA's World Factbook is 127,463,611.

    That's over 127 million people, just so you know. Of course, there are many more people around the world who have Japanese as their first or their preferred language. Many of those people are users of Windows. A large portion of those users do use Internet Explorer, and are planning on upgrading to IE7 as soon as it's possible. So of course any delays will be of great interest to them. The best thing Slashdot could do is tell the rest of the world about their plight.

    1. Re:This concerns a lot of Japanese people. by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      The best thing Slashdot could do is tell the rest of the world about their plight.

      Errrm. There is nothing preventing them from getting IE7. It just won't be automatic. Any Japanese person can download IE 7 right now.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    2. Re:This concerns a lot of Japanese people. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "are planning on upgrading to IE7 as soon as it's possible"

      Of course your single voice is speaking for 127E6 poeple in Japan? What's the friggen rush. It only took one forever and two eternities for IE6 to be upgraded. A few more years won't matter to IE users. It's not like anyone has not had an alternative to hold them over while waiting for this marginally more complient browser from Microsoft.

    3. Re:This concerns a lot of Japanese people. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what? I couldn't care less if there even was a version of IE7 in my localized language (hardly anybody speaks english here), nor a version of IE7 in any language for that matter. Besides, it is available, it's just not on auto update. Big f'n deal. People can manually install, keep their old browser which has been working just fine until now (not like it just ceased working the day IE7 came out), or use a number of other standard compliant browsers that come localized in a variety of languages, or god forbid they use the english version meanwhile (such a complex language - wouldn't want to learn the rudiments of a extremely useful language, right?) Nevermind they might have good and valid reasons not to put it on auto update too (no reasons to believe otherwise, not like they'd just pick a language and decide not to deploy it for no reason)...

      He's right. Absolute non-story.

    4. Re:This concerns a lot of Japanese people. by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 1

      If Japanese need to be updated on all the latest, there's a Japanese version of Slashdot just for that purpose. http://www.slashdot.jp/

      --
      "Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day; set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life
  11. It's a display problem. by Fonce · · Score: 0, Troll

    Easy. Being the Japanese version, people could only see a small, horizontal cross-section of all pages until Microsoft could put out a patch to enlarge the eyeslits.

    Am I going to hell now?

    --
    If all my base are belong to you and I attempt to retrieve my base, does that mean I'm freebasing?
    1. Re:It's a display problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LMFAO!!! Please mod parent up!! firefox has released rubberbands to counter Microsoft's patch.

    2. Re:It's a display problem. by kfg · · Score: 1

      Am I going to hell now?

      Dude, pay attention, you've been there for years already. Didn't you get the memo? Now, about those TPS reports. . .

      KFG

    3. Re:It's a display problem. by Fonce · · Score: 1

      I've got my copy of it right here and I already fixed the one that got sent out, so it's not even really a problem anymore.

      --
      If all my base are belong to you and I attempt to retrieve my base, does that mean I'm freebasing?
    4. Re:It's a display problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Am I going to hell now?


      Yes, I hope so.

    5. Re:It's a display problem. by stu42j · · Score: 1

      If you are going to be offensive, at least be funny too.

  12. This didn't happen overnight! by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 3, Informative

    Microsoft has been pushing IE7, even while it was in beta. It's not like these IT managers just heard about it a couple of weeks ago. They've had months to ensure and prepare for its release.

    1. Re:This didn't happen overnight! by noctrl · · Score: 2, Insightful

      yes, it did not :)

      We got the message Thursday from two of our application providers;
      "IE7 will not work, please wait for fix from us!"

      Things like this use quite a bit of time to go thru the system.

    2. Re:This didn't happen overnight! by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      So it was your application providers that were asleep. And, of course, you had no reason at all to test the apps yourselves.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    3. Re:This didn't happen overnight! by Lobster+Quadrille · · Score: 1

      I've been begging my company to let me install IE7 on my computer for the last few months, knowing it is going to break our web applications. Frankly, I'm excited because I hate our web applications and now I get to say "I told you so" to my boss, as well as get paid for plenty o' overtime to build a new one from scratch.

      I just wish they would've listened back then so it wouldn't be such a rush job. But noooobody listens to the lowly developer.

      --
      "The cup is in turn designed for holding hot or cold liquids, and has an open rim and closed base." --US Patent #5425497
    4. Re:This didn't happen overnight! by hritcu · · Score: 1

      Then upgrade with confidence. You would do us a great service if you all upgraded. Please.

      --
      If you don't fail at least 90 percent of the time, you're not aiming high enough. (Alan Kay)
    5. Re:This didn't happen overnight! by tgcid · · Score: 1

      Our company was still building DOS applications when Windows 2000 was released. Computers running our programs got Windows 98 installed on them to run it. Customers complaining about the reinstalling allowed us to build a VB6 version. (It was decided that C\Win32 would require too much programming time, even though the DOS apps were C and we need the performance) Now, we've spent 2.5 years trying to convince upper management to allow us to work on a .NET version, as some of our custom controls will break with Vista. They're not listening (again).

    6. Re:This didn't happen overnight! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft has been pushing IE7, even while it was in beta. It's not like these IT managers just heard about it a couple of weeks ago. They've had months to ensure and prepare for its release.

      Just because we've known they are working on yet another crappy version of their web browser doesn't mean we should have to accept them forcing it on users! And in some cases they did not have "months to ensure and prepare", as no one knew for sure exactly what bugs would still be an issue with their site by the time IE7 was out of beta. When attempting to interoperate with M$'s products it can be difficult at times to determine what is a bug with your application and what really is just a bug with their software, do to poor or unavialable documentation. And large sites may take more than a few months to redesign! And then theres the consideration that many people do NOT find it acceptable to have to redesign their entire web site(s) just because M$ cannot make a web browser that works properly!

      You know what though, this is fine by me! It will just create more users of alternative borwsers like Opera and FireFox. Which will help promot awareness of and use of F&OSS. Which will lead to the eventual replacement of M$ windows and office with better applications. We are already seeing it happen among our customer base with business using flocking to FireFox and OpenOffice.

      So M$ can turn their backs on their customers and try to force upgrades down peoples throats. And we can continue to simply replace them. And Vista, well, that will be a big mess that will hopefully be M$'s undoing. We can only hope...

  13. Why not just use Firefox? by mattbode · · Score: 1

    You could all join the people who don't care about IE and install Firefox.

    1. Re:Why not just use Firefox? by k12linux · · Score: 1

      If so many interactive intranet app developers didn't use activex controls, MS tools and MS libraries that only work with IE then more would. We have FF installed and set as the default browser throughout our organization and almost all Internet sites our users need work just fine. A few do not. Our 2nd most used intranet app, however, only works with IE. (And not with IE 7)

    2. Re:Why not just use Firefox? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You could all join the people who don't care about IE and install Firefox.
      You're preaching to the choir.
    3. Re:Why not just use Firefox? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could all join the people who don't care about IE and install Firefox.

      Why do people have to come onto every thread about IE and push Firefox? Slashdot knows what Firefox is. At the very least if you are going to push Firefox then push Opera also. Both are excellent browsers. /. knows the drawbacks of IE, and a lot of /. knows how to restrict IE so that it runs more securely than the default config. If they don't know, they are probably smart enough to find the information somewhere on the internet.

      I use Firefox and I have been using it for many years. I love Firefox, but I do not come onto /. and tell people to use it. I am starting to wish a post like yours would be marked as Troll, as it really feels like a complete Troll.

      Your post was not funny, was not insightful and was not informative. It was a waste of space. This was a story about businesses and IE7. Not about exploits or non standard coding practices, so therefore your post does not belong on this thread.

  14. Delayed scheduling? by aitsu · · Score: 1

    Not sure why but last time I checked (which was some time last week), the Japanese version was only available as an RC. Just checked again now and noticed that the final version's available. So anyway it looks to me like the release schedule for the Japanese version is a couple of weeks behind that of the English version.

  15. It's not a coincidence.. by aero2600-5 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    From what I understand, IE7 is being removed from corporate systems just as quickly as it's being installed. IE7 is breaking applications left and right. Macromedia's Dreamweaver won't operate properly if IE7 is installed on the same computer. There are other applications as well. Payroll software, punch clock software, etc.. It's apparently breaking all sorts of things.

    At my friend's company, there was a corporate wide memo stating that no one was to install IE7 except the "new media" departments, because they do all the website work and need to be able to test how IE7 slaughters their HTML and CSS. Even the new media departments were told to install "At your own risk".

    I don't think it's too far fetched to believe that the Japanese market caught word of how IE7 is breaking all sorts of other software and asked Microsoft not to push it. I think the response in the IE blog is bullshit. The Japanese don't want IE7. Not if it's going to break everything.

    Aero

    --
    Please stop hurting America -- Jon Stewart
    1. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Macromedia's Dreamweaver....
      That's Adobe's Dreamweaver, you insensitive clod!
    2. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tried it on a couple of new builds at work. Wouldn't let me load Outlook 98 with IE7 installed, another example of Microsoft forcing us all to upgrade?

    3. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by Shados · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Its kind of funny. Usualy we hear about how its the developer's fault that they are writting "non-standard compliant" code, and that they deserve what they get if it breaks in Firefox, or whatever... Now though, since code break because the code isn't standard compliant enough (while IE7 isn't very good still, it does a much better job rendering standard CSS than it does randering IE6 targetted crap) in a microsoft browser, its Microsoft thats evil :)

      A lot of the software that are breaking which are not related to web, however, do so because of their use of the MSHTML rendering engine... In a -lot- of cases, just changing the doctype tend to make things -relatively- OK. For the rest...well, IE7 has been in beta and RC for how long now? I know that IT stuff doesn't happen overnight, but Microsoft gave as much warning as they possibly could. If stuff broke (and I'm guilty of that, some web apps I wrote did break, and I didn't take time to test it in IE7), its the developer's own damn fault. They had like a year or something. Jesus...

    4. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by wycats · · Score: 2

      IE7 does *not* slaughter HTML and CSS. It breaks hacks that worked in IE6 because of unimplemented features there (or just plain bugs in IE6). Anyone who wrote HTML and CSS in standards-compliant ways, and worked around IE6 with conditional comments (and *not* by using hacks) will find their pages working smoothly. There's a substantial *improvement* in CSS support, but it's obviously not 100%.

    5. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, it's broken several things here too. I know it breaks some AutoCAD related soft, and my DB2 installer stopped working after installing IE7. And it's not exactly totally secured/bugfixed yet (too early for me to consdier deploying it). And the GUI is weird (menu bar below address bar by default?), is a far heavier on resources, needs WGA installed on all your desktops across your corporate LAN to install (scary thought). It breaks more things than it fixes, only to bring tabbed browsing. Hell, it shouldn't be on auto-update ANYWHERE!

      And the IE blog responses aren't too bad, except for that one noisy Japanese guy that just can't shut up. Like the world's coming to an end, how they're teh racist and driving asia's entire economy right into the ground, because some existing and unnecessary update isn't on auto-update. Doesn't matter that they already have a working browser, that they can download the updated version manually, or a variety of other browsers that support various languages. What a fucking idiot!

    6. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by bcrowell · · Score: 1

      At my friend's company, there was a corporate wide memo stating that no one was to install IE7 except the "new media" departments, because they do all the website work and need to be able to test how IE7 slaughters their HTML and CSS.
      IE6 has horrible CSS support. IE7 has pretty decent CSS support. If someone's coded their site so it doesn't work with a browser that implements CSS in a standard way, then they're idiots for doing that, and they've already got problems with any customer-facing stuff, because they're turning away customers who use Firefox.

      Last I heard, everyone on Slashdot was screaming bloody murder because IE7's CSS implementation didn't pass the Acid 2 test. Now we're upset because it implements the CSS standard better than IE 6 did?

    7. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by Lewisham · · Score: 1

      You have this the wrong way round. IE 7 has actually gotten better at rendering. Its breaking things because the dodgy hacks that had to be put into code to get it working right with IE 6 (rightly) no longer work.

      We've had a couple of things "break" in our office, and had the webmaster go through the old code. I stopped counting the times I heard him tell people on the telephone "well, yes, it shouldn't have worked in the first place."

      Microsoft got themselves into this hole, and now they are realising that IE 7 needs to dig itself out from the problems they caused.

    8. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by aero2600-5 · · Score: 1

      IE6 has horrible CSS support. IE7 has pretty decent CSS support. If someone's coded their site so it doesn't work with a browser that implements CSS in a standard way, then they're idiots for doing that, and they've already got problems with any customer-facing stuff, because they're turning away customers who use Firefox.

      I can't argue wih you that IE7 has better CSS support than IE6. It is better. And it's also far from standards compliant. My friend's company? It's the Florida Times-Union, and their website is Jacksonville.com. The code on this site is just about perfect, displays perfectly in Firefox and Opera, and up until last week when they changed the code, was bring ripped to shreds by IE7.

      Of course, my original post wasn't about IE7's mediocre CSS support. The post was about how IE7 is causing other applications to throw odd errors. The Florida Times-Union has removed IE7 from all of their computers, with the exception of web development, because people couldn't clock in, could calculate payroll, etc. That's IE7 breaking other apps on the system.

      Most people won't upgrade to IE7 because tabs and anti-phishing software are not enough incentive to break all their other applications, especially when they can run Firefox for free.

      Aero

      --
      Please stop hurting America -- Jon Stewart
    9. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by cheater512 · · Score: 1

      Its in the middle. It breaks the IE 6 hacks while not supporting CSS properly.

      It would be fine if it didnt break the IE 6 hacks OR if it supported CSS properly but its stuck somewhere in the middle and its causing chaos.

    10. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by Douglas+Goodall · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As a software developer, and an ex-company owner, I believe I understand all the sides of the issue. But in all fairness to everyone but Microsoft, I think I need to point out that Microsoft changes the rules all the time. Just because it workes a certain way in a beta or an RC, doesn't mean that is how it is going to work in the RTM (release to manufacturing). Since I don't write browser specific HTML code, I am not aware of the specific changes causing the problems, but in a more perfect world, companies and their developers would receive as much advance knowledge aboujt the impact of coming changes through the developer and support programs, such as MSDN and TechNet. Microsoft sends out so much beta stuff these days that a company would need about four sets of developers for their internet projects, infranet... A core group working on the application, a legacy group working on compatibility with previous versions of os/browsers. A current technology group dealing with todays os/browser, and a future technology group working on what is to come, and maybe two of those for the near stuff (Vista) and the far away stuff (longhorn). It is hard for companies to decide how to best administer their scant developer resources amongst these functions. Microsoft often changes it's mind and discontinues products and features unexpectedly. We are all doing to best we can. It is hard to resist browser specific enhancements when they improve the look and feel of the web app, but I don't give in. My web apps are all browser independent. :-)

    11. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by Douglas+Goodall · · Score: 1

      Ah... I am glad you mentioned the anti-phishing support. That one really stopped me dead in my tracks for about ten minutes. Do I really want my browser URLs being sent to Microsoft and having them decide if I can safely go where I want to. If they are not trustworthy, that sure puts a lot of my browser habits into their logs. I mean I think the filter might me a good idea if hashes of bad URLs were downloaded to the browser, but sending the raw urls to Microsoft gives me the willinillies. The idea sounds ok to start but after a moments thought, I don't know. What do you'all think?

    12. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by bcrowell · · Score: 1

      It breaks the IE 6 hacks while not supporting CSS properly. It would be fine if it didnt break the IE 6 hacks OR if it supported CSS properly but its stuck somewhere in the middle and its causing chaos.
      Personally, I have a site I coded recently using straightforward CSS, and it renders fine on Firefox, Opera, and IE7. The only browser it doesn't render properly on is IE6, so I had to put a hack into the CSS to get it to degrade gracefully under IE6. So admittedly this is a sample size of 1, but as far as I can tell IE7's CSS is fine and dandy, and IE6's is so pathetic that it doesn't work right on very straightforward, ordinary stuff.

      What's missing from all these complaints is any hard data. My guess is that once we see some hard data, we'll see that what we have here is a lot of web developers who coded as if IE6 was the only browser in existence, and ignored standards. They screwed over their users who used Firefox, but they didn't care because they perceived those people as being too small a percentage to matter. Now they're finding out that breaking standards means nobody is going to guarantee your code will work in the future.

    13. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by aero2600-5 · · Score: 1

      Last I heard, everyone on Slashdot was screaming bloody murder because IE7's CSS implementation didn't pass the Acid 2 test. Now we're upset because it implements the CSS standard better than IE 6 did?

      I forgot to mention something. Have you ever tried reading Slashdot with IE7? It completely slaughters that CSS and is pretty much unreadable. If IE7 is so standards compliant when it comes to CSS, why does Slashdot look like shite?

      Slashdot has some of the best written code I've ever seen. You can't argue with that.

      Aero

      --
      Please stop hurting America -- Jon Stewart
    14. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 1
      Dreamweaver won't operate properly if IE7 is installed on the same computer.

      Dreamweaver MX works fine for me. IE7 on XP Pro.

      --
      If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
    15. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by KanSer · · Score: 1

      That's not the only thing that IE7 has broken. I bought a new Gateway desktop last week, Core 2 Duo E6300, 2 gigs ram, T.V. Tuner, 256 meg Geforce 7300 LE (Lame Edition), XP Media Center edition.

      Within 15 minutes of installing IE7, Media Center stopped working. Every 15 seconds I would get a message that the Media Receiver Service had crashed. It was so weird that I was convinced I had gotten a virus, even though I had locked the system down snugger than a bug within an hour of starting it the first time.

      Well, to this day no viruses, spy ware, or any kind of mal-ware have been detected by the quintet of AVG, Norton (Which I re-installed after uninstalling it as the first thing I did to this computer), Spybot, Ad-Aware, and Windows Defender. I also use Security Task Manager to verify my currently running processes.

      However, uninstalling IE7 did not help. I then had to uninstall the previous Media Center update and re-install. Then everything worked.

      Media Center worked perfectly before IE7, and has worked perfectly since. Even under _extreme_ duress. (2 640X480 windowed instances of Quake 3 running the single player level of DM17, Tuner recording Family Guy, and Media Center serving an episode of Oprah to my mom in the living room via the xbox 360. Yeah, the E6300 does it without complaint, buy one.)

      It's pretty ugly when Microsoft is breaking it's own stuff, let alone DEVELOPERS DEVELOPS DEVELOPERS' stuff.

      --
      • MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward Wednesday April 20, @4:20
    16. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by gaspyy · · Score: 1

      I don't get this laziness.

      We provide services for a major insurance company. It would be disastrous if the Intranet and all the online software we've built for them stopped working because of a browser update. I've tried IE7 since beta1 (and believe me, they've changed the handling on CSS between beta1, beta2, rc1, etc.) and I made sure all the work we've done works correctly in IE7. Beta 1 was released in July 2005 I think. There was plenty of time to find & fix bugs, it's not like IE7 appeared just now out of nowhere.

      I guess it's much easier to just sit back and do nothing but bitch and moan how evil M$ is breaking your application.

      ---
      My Developer's Blog

    17. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by hritcu · · Score: 1

      This is not (only) Microsoft's fault. The developers that built applications that work only in broken IE6, and the institutions that bought them are even more responsible for this happening then Microsoft. They are pushing this update because it is a GOOD THING(TM) for which many web developers have been waiting for years. More secure, more standard compliant, less bugs. Most of the things that will break because of this upgrade are already broken. So stop blaming Microsoft for the incompetence of you web developers. You now get what you deserve for using websites that only work with their broken browser. Enjoy!

      --
      If you don't fail at least 90 percent of the time, you're not aiming high enough. (Alan Kay)
    18. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Troll FUD. I'm using IE7 and slashdot looks just fine.

    19. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by Keeper · · Score: 1

      You should read about how the phishing filter works before freaking out:
      * http://blogs.msdn.com/ie/archive/2005/09/09/463204 .aspx

      To summarize:
      * IE has a list of whitelisted sites which is stored locally
      * If the site you are visiting is in the whitelist, nothing is transmitted to Microsoft
      * If the site you are visiting is not in the whitelist, the URL path is transmitted to Microsoft to check against a blacklist (the URL path does not include parameters)

      Given the short lifetime and large quantity of phishing websites, maintaining a local blacklist isn't practicle -- it wouldn't be updated as fast as a centralized list and it would be too large to transmit to modem users. Additionally, a hash based "URL" check is useless for a phishing filter given the infinite number of ways an URL can be constructed.

      A healthy dose of paranoia is good and all, but quite frankly if Microsoft was trying to obtain your browsing history for some devious purpose there are a number of other, easier ways for them to do so.

    20. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by Douglas+Goodall · · Score: 1

      I really do appreciate that you took the time to explain how the phishing filter works. I didn't freak out, I just got the willinillies. I am still not comfortable with the idea even from an efficiency point of view, that would slow down my web accesses, effectively doubling the latency for any web accesses not in Microsofts white list. Latency plus lookup time for each url. Do you see where the processing load of phish processing for all ie7 users in the world could bog things down globally if Microsoft didn't provide enough processing power at the lookup point. I have yet to be convinced that Microsoft can handle it, especially if they are using their own software to handle the lookup. I don't think my idea about the URL hashing was that far off, at the very least they could resolve the url to an IP number which could be kept on the black list. What is wrong with that? That might have the effect of causing trouble for an ISP who was hosting a phishing site, but that would motivate them to shut down the phishing site and appply for clemency from Microsoft. I think giving Microsoft the ability to unilaterally block ie7 access for all internet users to a site is a lot of power, don't you think? Do you think it should be subject to some kind of neutral judgement, perhaps a court order. I think that is a lot of power.

    21. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      AVG, Norton (Which I re-installed after uninstalling it as the first thing I did to this computer), Spybot, Ad-Aware, and Windows Defender. I also use Security Task Manager

      quite sad, really...my condolences

    22. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by Keeper · · Score: 1

      I am still not comfortable with the idea even from an efficiency point of view, that would slow down my web accesses, effectively doubling the latency for any web accesses not in Microsofts white list

      The phishing check occurs in parallel with the site download. Odds are, you're going to wait longer for the page to download than the phishing check.

      Do you see where the processing load of phish processing for all ie7 users in the world could bog things down globally if Microsoft didn't provide enough processing power at the lookup point. I have yet to be convinced that Microsoft can handle it, especially if they are using their own software to handle the lookup

      The windows update site should be sufficient to demonstrate that Microsoft does have the resources to handle a large load of traffic. Only sites NOT in the whitelist are sent -- most traffic won't hit their servers, reducing the effective load. Finally, I personally have noticed any performance related problems since I started using it.

      I don't think my idea about the URL hashing was that far off, at the very least they could resolve the url to an IP number which could be kept on the black list. What is wrong with that?

      It would result in every page on geocities being flagged as a phishing site. (not that I especially like geocities or think that their content is worth vieweing, but you should be able to grasp the general problem posed by your suggestion)

      That might have the effect of causing trouble for an ISP who was hosting a phishing site, but that would motivate them to shut down the phishing site and appply for clemency from Microsoft.

      No, it would motivate them to sue the crap out of Microsoft. You're looking at this as if it were a rather static problem. It isn't; as I said before, the typical lifetime of a phishing site is very short -- typically 1 or 2 days. ISPs already actively shut down phishing sites and don't need additional "encouragement" to do so.

      I think giving Microsoft the ability to unilaterally block ie7 access for all internet users to a site is a lot of power, don't you think

      Wait a minute; you don't trust Microsoft with your URL path, but you trust them enough to censor the internet for you?

    23. Re:It's not a coincidence.. by Douglas+Goodall · · Score: 1

      Wait a minute; you don't trust Microsoft with your URL path, but you trust them enough to censor the internet for you? No I don't trust them to censor the Internet for me. If I wasn't clear about that, I apologize.

  16. Who backs business in the US by Archfeld · · Score: 1

    besides business ? In japan the government and the mega-corps speak as one generally. For good or bad, this lends weight to their demands.

    --
    errr....umm...*whooosh* *whoosh* Is this thing on ?
  17. other countries by Verunks · · Score: 0

    also here in italy microsoft didn't put ie7 on windows update for what i can see

  18. Re:There's a bazillion reasons why IE7 is pushed by jlarocco · · Score: 1

    I don't see the point. I don't do web development, but I have heard the new IE is just about as bad as the old IE when it comes to standards compliance. It's just bad in different ways. So won't web developers have to throw away tons of information on IE6 incompatibility, just to figure it out all over again for IE7? Sounds like a lot of wasted time.

    If security is really the issue, shouldn't they remove IE altogether?

  19. Are You Kidding Me by wycats · · Score: 3, Insightful
    For crying out loud, this is the sort of thing that really bugs me. I was recently asked, publicly, what my #1 web development annoyance is. I answered IE6. So I don't have any love for Microsoft. I also own a Mac Pro and a Macbook. So I've spent good money on Apple. And I like my machines. But there's a seriously painful double standard here:
    • Every incremental feature update of OSX costs $130. Incremental feature updates to Windows are free (by incremental, I mean ones where the underlying OS is the same, but features are added. Think OSX and Windows XP)
    • Firefox has an automatic push feature that automatically downloads and offers to install the new version of FF. So does IE.
    • You can only install OSX on Apple hardware. Any licensing restrictions on the use of Windows causes a serious outcry here.
    • Steve Jobs has openly said his iPod marketing strategy involves building iPods in such a way that forces users to buy new ones every year. Imagine if Microsoft said something similar about Windows (never mind that there *is* a new version of OSX that you have to buy every year or so if you want the newest features)
    • Firefox recently got into a licensing dispute with a Linux vendor who wanted to use its name but not its logo. Firefox legally blocked them (relatively minor, but still)
    • The bottom line is that lately, MS has been behaving fairly well. I think that's clear. They've executed legally binding agreements not to sue based on certain patents it holds, implemented very impressive CSS improvements to IE, and brought the Firefox crew over to Vista headquarters to help them make the transition to Vista. We should step back for just a bit and let Microsoft get IE7 and Vista out. Quite frankly, the day IE7 kills IE6, I will be a very happy person. And so will many, many web developers. The "push" is actually a pretty good thing, in the end. Until the day that I start seeing people attacking Apple for Jobs' "reality distortion field" and practices that sometimes closely mirror the actions of Microsoft, I'll look dubiously at posts like this. Frankly, I'm getting tired of them.
    1. Re:Are You Kidding Me by Shados · · Score: 1

      Finally, I'm not alone feeling that way.

    2. Re:Are You Kidding Me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every incremental feature update of OSX costs $130. Incremental feature updates to Windows are free (by incremental, I mean ones where the underlying OS is the same, but features are added. Think OSX and Windows XP)

      When's the last time an incremental upgrade of Windows actually added new features?

      Firefox has an automatic push feature that automatically downloads and offers to install the new version of FF. So does IE.

      Firefox upgrades don't break things. Here's where not having the browser integrated into the OS is a good thing.

      Personally, I'm not too concerned with this whole upgrade mess because anything that relies on IE6 is already broken in my book. And I couldn't care less about what happens with Mac/iPod users -- you can work that out with Apple.

    3. Re:Are You Kidding Me by DannyO152 · · Score: 1

      But IE6 won't be killed. It's going to be around as long as people are using Windows 2000, at least.

      I have no point of view about automatic updates and Microsoft vs. Firefox, except, I really suspect that the Mozilla/Firefox api is far more orthogonal to customers' systems and applications than IE. If I'm wrong, I'm wrong, if I'm not, it's because Microsoft chose for it to be that way and therefore does have more responsibility for thinking twice before pushing something down the line.

      As for the Microsoft-Novell thing, it sure looks to me like Microsoft is tossing a skunk into the room; time will tell.

      As for OS X upgrades, I haven't spent the $130 (it's more because I get the family license) since April 05 and I'm guessing there's another 4 months before Leopard ships, which means I've had two years to save the $130.00. I also think that "Microsoft updates for free" is a classic false economy. I'm also used to the concept that higher quality tools require higher investments for maintenance.

    4. Re:Are You Kidding Me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've used XulRunner to deploy applications before. It allows you to install a separate, application-specific version of XulRunner, which you can deploy on pretty much any version of Windows, with any version (or no version) of Internet Explorer, and get consistent behaviour. And on Linux and MacOS X, of course.

      When they get around to doing a formal release (with the XulRunner-based Firefox 3 and Thunderbird 3), XulRunner will still allow applications to select which version of the Gecko engine they want to use if they're using the system-installed XulRunner. So if your app is tested against one version of XulRunner, it'll continue using that one version of XulRunner.

      The upshot is that upgrading the browser can not interfere with third-party applications, even if they make huge changes that totally break backwards compatibility. The app is independent of the system.

      That's not the case with Microsoft's MSHTML engine, or HTA applications. You need to test those on just about every possible combination of Windows and Internet Explorer. If you want to support back to Windows 98 with IE 5, you need to test on Windows 98 with IE 5.0, IE 5.5, IE 6.0, Windows ME with IE 5.5, IE 6.0, Windows 2000 with IE 5.5, IE 6.0, Windows XP with IE 6.0, IE 6.0 SP2, and now IE 7.0. Considering the number of applications that use the MSHTML engine, it should be obvious how much of a disruption upgrading to IE 7 can be.

      And that's not counting all the IE-only intranet apps out there.

    5. Re:Are You Kidding Me by mr_matticus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If it's an incremental update (your first contention), then your fourth contention is in direct opposition--incremental updates don't proffer "new features." With the exception of Windows SP2, when was the last "free" update to Windows known to provide new features and critical technologies? SP1? SP1a? W2K SP3? None of these are equivalent to new iterations of OS X.

      Compare Apple's update cycle to Microsoft's, prior to their "we're done with Windows!" release of XP. You had Windows 95B, Windows 98, Windows 98SE, Windows ME, Windows 2000, and Windows XP all released (for pay) in a roughly four year period (early 1997 to October 2001). Since 2002, there have been 3 updates to OS X for pay. I don't know about you, but the jump from 10.2 to 10.4 seems much more worthwhile than the jump from Windows 98 to ME (ME's atrocious quality and reliability notwithstanding).

      Apple provides free updates to their OS, too--several of them, much more rapidly than Microsoft offers service packs, but more slowly than MS security fixes. Will XP SP3 introduce new applications and important features useful for developers or users? I wouldn't count on it.

    6. Re:Are You Kidding Me by Douglas+Goodall · · Score: 1

      I acknowledge that Apple equipment has a higher entry price, but I have been very satisfied with the quality of the hardware and service from Apple. Once you get past that, I really like that they provide a lot of development software and references for free to the Apple user's. As a software engineer I have always voted for bundling the development software with the operating system. Of course recently Microsoft has started macking express versions of their development products free to download. I guess that's sort of cool. Since I purchased my apple's, there have only been two new OS releases, Panther and Tiger. Both times I bought the family pack and I have been very happy with the license terms. Apple even replaced my Tiger DVD when I lost mine. I think that even though Apple comes oujt with new operating systems, they are still complying with CUA (common user access) and I have no trouble learning new stuff, given that the framework stays the same. Recently Microsoft has deviated from CUA, and their new operating system and office suite are no longer CUA compliant. I like using Microsoft and deviated in the same sentence. I do not feel comfortable with their new operating system or office suite. I would have to start over from scratch learning how to use them. And by the way, after my PC got its IE7 update, the friendly menu bar was gone and I am lost again. When Microsoft was stealing Apple's look and feel, they joined the CUA croud because the standards were helpful to make users feel at home. What is their excuse now for not being CUA compliant? We don't care if the user feels at home because we know best, we are Microsoft?

    7. Re:Are You Kidding Me by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      Here's a summary of what changed between various versions of Windows, also taking into account that Windows 2000 is in a different product line than Windows 95/98/ME.

      Home:
      1995 - Windows 95 - New Windows GUI, new API, Plug and Play. Device Drivers are implemented directly in Windows instead of in DOS.
      1997 - Windows 95b - Preliminary USB and FAT32 support, not available in stores
      1998 - Windows 98 - USB and FAT32 support in mainstream. Unlike Windows 95, supports drives larger than 32GB. First version to include IE as a core component.
      1999 - Windows 98SE - Windows 98 with a service pack. Seriously, there's no reason to buy it if you already have 98 as the updates are already on Windows Update.
      2000 - Windows ME - Windows 98, but crashier thanks to the weirdness that was ME's System Restore. Tries to hide DOS and claim it isn't there, even though it is. Was quickly replaced by Windows XP.
      2001 - Windows XP - Finally uses the Windows NT kernel. DOS dependence is gone. Much more stable than 98 or ME. First truly multi-user home version of Windows. System Restore actually kind of works, although I personally don't trust it.

      Business:
      1996 - Windows NT4 - First version of Windows NT to use the 95 GUI. Still no PnP support, though.
      1996-1999 - Various NT4 Service Packs. No idea what they contained, I never used NT4.
      1999 - Windows 2000 - Significant upgrades to the way NTFS and drivers work. PnP finally supported (and the crowds rejoiced).
      2001 - Windows 2000 SP2 - Something major must have changed, because all modern software that runs on Windows 2000 requires SP2.
      2001 - Windows XP - Windows 2000 with a new GUI and changes to the default IDE driver. ASPI is conspicuously absent, breaking CD Writing software that worked fine under 2000.

      Other updates not mentioned above include Windows 2000 SP4 and XP SP2 (added support for larger ATA addressing to get around the ATA 137GB bug)

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    8. Re:Are You Kidding Me by mr_matticus · · Score: 1

      Excellent overview. As you illustrated succinctly, aside from 2000/XP switching to the NT kernel, there are no earth-shattering differences. Windows Media Player (not Classic), Movie Maker, System Restore, etc. joined the cast at various points.

      Meanwhile, here's a simple overview of the supposedly "incremental" updates to OS X since 10.1:

      10.2 "Jaguar": Introduced Quartz Extreme, iChat, improved Windows networking and CUPS printing support, spam filtering for Mail, Rendezvous zeroconf networking (which to this day works better than Windows zeroconf), and a serious of UI changes and updates, along with tons of new APIs, frameworks, and general cleanup. Jaguar was to Cheetah what Vista has wound up being to XP.

      10.3 "Panther": More UI changes and updates, more performance enhancements, the introduction of Exposé and Fast User Switching, FileVault encryption, Safari, and a whole host of minor improvements to various applications and functions. Users who hadn't felt the need to upgrade from 10.1 in the prior release generally jumped on board for Panther--it was a very popular upgrade, compared to Jaguar, and a substantial improvement over 10.1 in terms of stability, performance, and polish.

      10.4 "Tiger": Again, more UI updates, Spotlight (including "smart" folders in Mail and the system), Dashboard, H.264 throughout, Automator, Core technologies, production-ready x86 support. The Core technologies constitute a revolutionary set of behind the scenes changes for the OS making application development easier and more robust--very similar to what we'd all hoped Vista would accomplish with its various dropped technologies.

      Now, I'm not saying that each iteration of OS X has been earth-shattering either, but each one offers substantially more than a Microsoft service pack and in many cases, more obvious distinctions than between versions of Windows (the entire 9x series hasn't covered as much ground as OS X since 10.2; the 2000 family, including XP, MCE, and Vista, likewise, hasn't outpaced Apple's contributions). I'm not Apple proselytizing nor am I Microsoft bashing. I'm just pointing out that it's not fair to complain about Apple's $129 upgrades every 18 months as if they're asking for money for updates 'everyone else' releases for free.

    9. Re:Are You Kidding Me by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      Actually, you reminded me that I forgot to mention that XP introduced Fast User Switching, improved wireless network switching, Windows Messenger (read: MSN Messenger), and the .NET framework. Oops.

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    10. Re:Are You Kidding Me by phorm · · Score: 1

      Firefox has an automatic push feature that automatically downloads and offers to install the new version of FF. So does IE.

      *Firefox: Can be disabled in the browser
      *IE: Comes with security updates. If you want those, you can't really avoid it.

      There's a difference, although personally I'd prefer the 'fox auto-updates to be disabled by default as well.

    11. Re:Are You Kidding Me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Apple comes out with new operating systems, they are still complying with CUA (common user access)"

      AFAIK, Apple never has complied with CUA. IIRC, CUA proscribes such things as

      • A menu bar at the top of the window, not the screen
      • Copy is [Ctrl]+[Ins]
      • One does not need a mouse for any command

      I have never seen any of these in good Mac applications.

      Apple has/d its Human Interface Guidelines (HIG), which inspired CUA.

    12. Re:Are You Kidding Me by mr_matticus · · Score: 1

      Incidentally, I left out for the most part applications and features that were made available for older platforms (Messenger and .Net would fall into that on the Windows side). ;)

    13. Re:Are You Kidding Me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Incremental updates don't proffer "new features." With the exception of Windows SP2, when was the last "free" update to Windows known to provide new features and critical technologies?

      "With the exception of a perfect example of a case when it happened, when did it ever happen?"

      Man, with debating skills like that, you should enter politics.

  20. I can tell you why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    because IE6 is such a cluster fuck that any business applications specifically developed for it fall over flat on their face under IE7 because of all the IE6 specific work-arounds they had to use. Lock-ins a bitch and gives as well has it takes. Fuck Microsoft, Fuck IE. Firefox/Mozilla Rule!

  21. WSUS? by insomniac8400 · · Score: 1

    Businesses should be using WSUS, so why do they need a tool to block it?

    1. Re:WSUS? by Douglas+Goodall · · Score: 1

      That assumes that a company wants to pay for a server and keep it secure just so that they can get personal with each and every update. The server would have to be licensed wide enough for all the users and then there are the client access licenses. And an administrator to look after the WSUS server and its updates.

    2. Re:WSUS? by DavidRawling · · Score: 1

      Or you could realise that it will run fine on any existing IIS server you have (2000 and 2003 supported, IIRC), is completely free if you are licensed for Windows Server (one server only) and doesn't need CALs.

      And if you set the policy right it takes about 10 minutes a month to administer.

      Nice piece of FUD there ...

    3. Re:WSUS? by Douglas+Goodall · · Score: 1

      I don't think what I said was FUD. You still have to have a licensed server. If you didn't already have one, you would have to buy hardware and software and get the thing running. You can only have as many concurrent IIS accesses as the connection limit (which I called width, my term). If you know how to set the policy right the first time, more power to you. I was shooting from the hip about the client access licenses, I admit that...

    4. Re:WSUS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Still, if you are responsible for more than an handfull of windows end users and are not using WSUS you are being negligent. You are leaving the state of the end-users critical and security updates up to the end users. That is asking for tons of trouble.

    5. Re:WSUS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're still screwed if you're a small business with one do-everything server that can't run SUS or WSUS for compatability reasons (e.g. MS Proxy server) and has no dedicated IT staff. Like ours.

      I've ended up using AutoPatcher because windows update frequently just doesn't work through our shitty proxy / firewall.

    6. Re:WSUS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't seem to find an RPM for that, or a SRPM that I can build a binary for my Fedora PPC server. Apple isn't any better, their solution for a local-network update server is tied to their Server product.

  22. Not newsworthy by Werrismys · · Score: 1

    IE7 is M$ and Winblows-only, so it is not newsworthy at all. It only runs on crap spamstations.

    --
    'Once scientists, even the dim-witted social scientists, get muzzled, the Western Civilization is finished.' - oldhack
  23. Re:There's a bazillion reasons why IE7 is pushed by Shados · · Score: 1

    IE7, while still crap, is lighyears better than IE6 when it comes to standards. I have done a few things on IE7, which I tend opened in Firefox, and often it worked on first try. Sometimes I had 1-2 things to fix. Its not -perfect-, but it can literally slash in half the time it takes to make things cross-browser, if you work in a world without IE6. Also while IE7 isn't perfectly secure, it is still a lot more, and on Vista, it is sandboxed (so again, not perfect, but easily an order of magnitude more secure than IE6, or IE7 on XP). So it is a required upgrade, unless you figure out a way to move everyone to Firefox tomorrow

    All the issues people are having are bad. But if an application is made IE6 only, what do you think is harder? Fixing it to work in IE7, or fixing it to work in Firefox? If these people are freaking out over IE7, its gonna take them decades to fix their apps for a true compliant browser... This was needed.

  24. Endusers by WiFireWire · · Score: 0

    We blocked the auto-install on our school district simply because the security in IE7 is much too complicated for our typical end users to deal with(teschers, principals, etc) All of the web-based applications that we use simply DO NOT work out of the box....significant security modifications are needed just to make the apps function. Our standpoint was a training standpoint. Once the training and testing is done WE will control the deployment of IE7, not microsoft.

    1. Re:Endusers by empaler · · Score: 1

      Congratulations, you've made one of the most intelligent and relevant posts in the debate so far.

      Microsoft made available tools to control the deployment of IE7 (of course, up to a certain date, then you will be forced AFAIR), which should have been used by the server admins in businesses (schools count as a business here) where such a change could negatively affect productivity.
      Good sysadmins test and test and test. Also, as you mention, the users are used to the old software; the new software is very different and they should be prepared for it.
      I remember my IT teachers in high school teaching extremely basic computer stuff by reading aloud from presentations prepared or purchased for them.
      It's not because these people are stupid, it is because this is not their field. To them, computers are a tool.
      Bleh. This became a bit ranting, sorry for that.

    2. Re:Endusers by Douglas+Goodall · · Score: 1

      IT Teachers in High School, now that's something I never knew. When I was in High School, we had a bendix g15 with tubes. I was in charge of the computer club, and what we knew about computers was how to write a program by arranging prepunched cards in a certain order. Learning about computers in school would have been nice. You should appreciate it.

    3. Re:Endusers by snotty · · Score: 1

      Actually, Microsoft has never stated that IE7 will be forced to the users after a grace period. In fact, the block will hold as long as the blocker is in place.

      blocker details.

      Disclaimer : I am a product manager for IE =)

    4. Re:Endusers by empaler · · Score: 1

      I stand corrected, then. I also find it a bit entertaining that the IE7 blocker requires WGA authentication - because Microsoft really don't want them software pirate vermins to not install IE7! (or something)
      Am I wrong if I remember there not being this restriction to begin with? It's been months, and it never strikes me as very important so I don't go around noting stuff up like this.

      I do wonder why your homepage is a LUG* if you're a product manager at MS. Not that I disbelieve you though.

  25. Very, very well said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no text

  26. Slashdot in 10 easy steps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're new here, aren't you?

    There are no "double standards" here, just a few simple rules to follow, so that we may all enjoy /. in heterogenous bliss:

    1. OSS good
    2. Proprietary bad
    3. Google good
    4. Apple very good
    5. Sony bad
    6. Microsoft very bad
    7. If you disagree with what I post, you're a troll (regardless of what recreational substances I was using while writing the post)
    8. If someone interprets something MS or Sony did in the worst possible light, and you disagree, you're astroturfing
    9. Bill Gates drinks the blood of puppies to ease the pain of bluescreens
    10. Steve Jobs is either a design genius or a cult leader; pick one. If the latter, unless you own a Mac or an ipod you're a troll

    See? it's not so hard.

    1. Re:Slashdot in 10 easy steps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But, if you say "I know I'm going to get modded down for this", no matter how pro-Microsoft or anti-Slashdot you are, you get modded insightful. Problem solved.

  27. 2 cents from the online media camp by IronChefMorimoto · · Score: 1

    I would bet that there were things in Japanese sites (CSS?) that would've been broken, perhaps?

    The fact of the matter is, when IE7 came out here in the US (still haven't seen an AUTO INSTALL on WinXP SP2 on my home machine?!), the newspaper company I work for scrambled to fix all of its sites to handle some odd CSS issues in IE7 that had been resolved in IE6. Web-based admin tools that our newspapers use, as well as the newspaper websites themselves, had to be examined from front to back to make sure that IE7 didn't break anything.

    I know that the easiest fix for some of our tools was switching over the method for AJAX. I think IE7 became MORE standards compliant in that regard? However, lots of CSS nav had to be re-worked on websites for things like pulldown menus and such. Advertising as well.

    This is just my company's single experience with the release of IE7. I can imagine that, in Japan or any other country faced with an auto-install of IE7 that could affect a large percentage of the browsing public, there would be some concerns about the impact of the web browser coming out automatically.

    I want to say, too, that my company was well prepared for IE7 -- we learned of the MSDN blog entries that announced the mid-October release and set up 2-3 task forces to manage issues. So far, it's been smooth. But that preparation time was important. I'd suspect the situation would be the same in Japan.

    My 2 cents...

    IronChefMorimoto

  28. Knowing Japan.. by musakko · · Score: 1

    I don't know the specific technical reasons why IE7 has been delayed in Japan, but I have worked in Japan and with Japanese clients in the IT industry for 12 years and I can tell you that while American and western users might like to think that they hold high standards for software quality, that is NOTHING compared to what Japanese companies and users expect. There is a tradition of service (at ridiculuos cost to the provider). If I was running a software company, I'd outsource all the QA work to Japan. That's how thorough and picky they are about small issues. I wouldn't be surprised if some IE7 issues which US and other users complained about but were basically willing to let go weren't raised as a red-flag-production-down-critical in the Japan and that was the reason for the delay.

    1. Re:Knowing Japan.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      at ridiculuos cost to the provider


      I wouldn't..that's a pretty large caveat if you don't have to (unless you're selling to Japan).
    2. Re:Knowing Japan.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      is that why their cars last more than 100,000 miles?

    3. Re:Knowing Japan.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I second that. Japanese consumers can be brutal. You'll do it right the first time or lose customers. Just ask some global Non-Japanese companies who are doing business in Japan in which country they have most complaints.
      Japan! Don't get me wrong, I don't want to criticize the Japanese for this behaviour. You can expect unparalleled service and product quality if you are a customer, but you'll have to provide the same level of quality if your customers are Japanese. Accept the rules of this market or stay away from it if you are not ready for it. MS is probably smart enough to fix IE7 before releasing it to Japanese customers.

  29. PC Relocator by AlohaBob. Au Revoir Bob by Microso by Jon-Paul+R · · Score: 1

    I've been using PC Relocator 6 (which use to be by Aloha Bob) for almost 2 years now. It's a great program that has allowed my clients to move from one old PC to another new faster PC when the time comes. PC Relocator allows me to transfer their files, settings and programs almost flawlessly. It's been a life and business savior for many of my people. I was at a customer this week that needed to get a new PC. I went to the Aloha Bob website to see if there was some information on how to tansfer a certain type of program. Upon going there, the site was.... useless. MICROSOFT BOUGHT THEM! Here's what Microsoft said, "Microsoft's acquisition of Apptimum, Inc. will not result in significant changes for current customers of Alohabob products. Customers will continue to receive the product support they were entitled to, and there have been no changes to the support policy. Customers should continue to contact support in the same ways they are accustomed to, by following the links provided on this website. Microsoft does not plan to continue selling the existing Apptimum products." NO CHANGES MY ASS! I knew they were up to something right then and there the moment I read that. Microsoft doesn't by a company like that for no reason.... After installing all the latest Windows updates, I tried to move only a few programs from the users computer to the new system. GUESS WHAT. PC Relocator was USELESS. It could not function because it did not recognize the latest version of IE (Internet Explorer 7) and guess what, Microsoft has killed the product. There are no new updates ever coming out and no new versions. Au Revoir Bob. :-( Jon-Paul R Inventor: www.wintiles.com Musician: www.smoothjazzfusion.com

  30. Yes. Because it doesnt work on Japanese system by Riquez · · Score: 1

    I installed IE7 on it's day of release on a Japanese PC in our office. The Laptop was out of the box & only a few days old - not even in use by anyone.
    Anyway, the result was that IE7 froze & lockedup the PC into 100% CPU useage.
    Over the past few weeks I was surprised not to hear others with this issue, so I began to assume it must be a incompatibility with the Japanese language version of Windows. From the topic of this item, looks like that could be right.

    --
    * Game Over * High Score: 264,846,927 -- Your Score: 14
  31. So, what you're saying is... by empaler · · Score: 1

    ... it was delayed to let the rest of the world test it before it was released in Japan, so as to avoid any issues occuring in the first major release version of IE7?
    Makes sense if the Japanese market is so sensitive to them that they'd risk losing business customers.

  32. Re:There's a bazillion reasons why IE7 is pushed by mattpointblank · · Score: 1

    How do you literally slash time in half? Quantum physicists would like to know.

  33. I hate to be a jerk at this point... by tkrotchko · · Score: 1

    But if people hadn't coded their web sites so closely to IE5/6 then they probably wouldn't have a problem with IE7. I mean, it would probably take a little longer to make it work with Firefox and IE, but the result is they aren't tied to a single vendor's implementation.

    But that's the past. Will the people who got so burned by this learn their lesson and make their sites cross browser compatible? Or will they repeat the same mistake except with IE7?

    Something to think about, anyway.

    --
    You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    1. Re:I hate to be a jerk at this point... by OriginalArlen · · Score: 1

      Sure, just as soon as web development consultancies and inhouse IT departments stop hiring 21-year-old "web developer" Ook-ers who just finished "Learn ASP in 28 days" to develop critical applications with no oversight, peer review or input from security.

      --

      Everything I needed to know about life, I learnt from Blake's Seven
    2. Re:I hate to be a jerk at this point... by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      But that would mean they would have to pay more money and break the Microsoft TCO advantage.

      I love the reports that say free as in beer software costs more because the trained monkeys supporting it expect more money then Microsoft's monkeys. Yes, I say monkeys because in order to get the numbers right, i suspect monkey business going on.

  34. Re:There's a bazillion reasons why IE7 is pushed by Shados · · Score: 1

    Its an feature in Windows Vista. All programs => Accessories => Accessibility => Time Manipulation

  35. Oh, man, you fail it by empaler · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Yup=teh sukc.
    Besides, first post is no excuse for not getting laid nor not having a job.

  36. digging a grave ? by Tom · · Score: 1

    I wonder if this is MS digging the grave of IE.

    Look, IE7 is largely incompatible with IE6. So lots of websites will have to be redesigned now. If they have to be reworked anyways, you can do it with proper HTML and CSS support, getting rid of the proprietary IE crap. Which means Firefox, Opera, etc. will work just as well.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  37. BSD v. GPL: The Fundamental Difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BSD: "I don't like telling other people what to do, so I won't."
    GPL: "I don't like people telling other people what to do, so I'll tell them exactly what they can and can't tell other people to do."

    Fuck that hypocritical bullshit. Intelligence is GPL-incompatible. Use BSD instead; abandon self, and you shall achieve nirvana.

    1. Re:BSD v. GPL: The Fundamental Difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GPL: "I don't like software whose license takes away basic freedoms I consider to be essential. You can only build your product upon my hard work if you're willing to provide those freedoms to your customers as I have provided them to you."

    2. Re:BSD v. GPL: The Fundamental Difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GPL: "I don't like software whose license takes away basic freedoms I consider to be essential. I like software whose license takes away basic freedoms that you consider to be essential."

  38. someone give him a one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    HAHAHAHAHAHA!

    short, but teh funnee!

    Now I have to trawl the repos looking for the linux equivalent!

  39. That's why I like Nintendo by empaler · · Score: 1

    Stuff that comes from Nintendo just works.
    Granted, some of the games are a bit weird, but they are very good at what they do.
    They must be insanely hard on the programmers every time they get an bug report from the QA team (No sleep for a month to you!) because there are so few glitches.
    I was moderately surprised to find out that the Wii was going to be firmware upgradable because I did not expect it to be necessary at any point.

  40. This is NOT an auto-install by ThinkFr33ly · · Score: 1

    Just to be clear, Microsoft is NOT automatically installing IE 7 on people's machines.

    The "critical" Windows update is simply an installer shim which first prompts the user and asks if they want to install IE 7. They can say yes, no, or not now (remind me later.)

    1. Re:This is NOT an auto-install by Oswald · · Score: 1
      Well that answers the burning question "Why do I still have IE 6 even though I have auto-update running on my WinXP boxes?" I was starting to feel left out.

      I wonder if this was just Slash-hysteria all along, or if MS changed their minds about how to handle the updates. I guess if I'd bothered to read the articles when this story first came out I might know.

    2. Re:This is NOT an auto-install by ThinkFr33ly · · Score: 1

      This has always been the plan. Since Microsoft first announced they would distribute IE7 via Windows Update they have consistently maintained it would be optional and would always ask the user for permission.

      Like many other Microsoft-related stories, the Slashdot crowd tends to prefer making up their own facts and ignoring reality if that reality happens to show Microsoft in a less than satanic light.

  41. HP... by MindDelay · · Score: 0

    i know the IE7 push is causing problems with some HP software now. i wouldn't be surprised if it's causing problems with lots of other company's software too and people are getting fed up. i hope they stop this autopush or whatever. would make my life easier for the time being.

    --
    Spiral out. Keep going...
  42. The great part of IE7 by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 1

    The best feature of IE7 is that it makes it easier to use Firefox. No, really. With IE7 installed, when you enter a URL into a Windows Explorer windows (as I frequently did as a mattter of habit when I was using IE6), it launches the default browser (Firefox in my case). With IE6, it just turns the Explorer window into an IE window - convenient, but a pain in the neck when you realize that you've been using IE.

    1. Re:The great part of IE7 by whitehatlurker · · Score: 1
      Really? I wonder if that works for those really stupid applications that only use IE for URL handling. If I could use this to get Adobe Acrobat Reader to start using my default browser instead of IE, that would be a terrific reason for installing IE7.

      Thanks for the tip. I'm going to have to try this.

      --
      .. paranoid crackpot leftover from the days of Amiga.
  43. Re:There's a bazillion reasons why IE7 is pushed by jlarocco · · Score: 1
    So it is a required upgrade, unless you figure out a way to move everyone to Firefox tomorrow

    Why don't people just use this as an opportunity to switch to Firefox or Opera? If a whole bunch of sites are already breaking with IE7, why not just go all the way for full standards compliance? Don't most people make sites that work in Firefox/Opera and validate, then hack them for IE?

    All the issues people are having are bad. But if an application is made IE6 only, what do you think is harder? Fixing it to work in IE7, or fixing it to work in Firefox? If these people are freaking out over IE7, its gonna take them decades to fix their apps for a true compliant browser... This was needed.

    If I had to guess, I would say going from IE6 to IE7 would be harder than IE6 to something standards compliant. The web standards are fairly well documented by w3c. The bugs and incompatibilites in IE7 are not.

  44. seriously by minus_273 · · Score: 1

    IE 7 IS better than IE 6. That alone makes it a security update. If it were named ie 6.x with tabs, better security and standards, you wouldnt see this article at all. this is the same as XP SP2 being delayed in some environments for testing.

    --
    The war with islam is a war on the beast
    The war on terror is a war for peace
  45. Re:There's a bazillion reasons why IE7 is pushed by Shados · · Score: 1
    Don't most people make sites that work in Firefox/Opera and validate, then hack them for IE?
    The peanut gallery in their spare times do. A -couple- of significant companies. Go on any mainstream web site, and right click and look at the source. Its about 50/50, give or take. Last I checked, Google didn't even have a freagin doctype.

    If I had to guess, I would say going from IE6 to IE7 would be harder than IE6 to something standards compliant. The web standards are fairly well documented by w3c. The bugs and incompatibilites in IE7 are not
    Actualy, Microsoft is fairly decent at documenting that stuff. My point though, is if you have a 600+ individual pages made for IE, or you are using the MSHTML rendering engine (a LOT of applications do that you wouldn't expect to use anything like that), fixing a few things for IE7 (which is probably just switching a doctype, and a couple of fixes... over 600 pages its significant, but its still better than nothing) is a lot easier than moving everything to standard compliance. I expected the hit, so as much as I could, I kept my code (even in IE-only apps) relatively close to standard, so fixing things for Firefox was a matter of changing a few shared javascript functions, and a bit of CSS in specific sections. Same with IE7, so I was ok. Some companies have millions of lines of old HTML/CSS to fix... moving it to IE7 is a lot easier, trust me.
    Why don't people just use this as an opportunity to switch to Firefox or Opera
    Time and ressource restrictions (and in some cases, lack of knowledge)
  46. I call Shenanigans by mapmaker · · Score: 1
    It is very possible that Microsoft wants IE7 to be installed for security reasons

    If that were true, wouldn't they make it available for some of the other flavors of Windows besides XP?

    1. Re:I call Shenanigans by 3770 · · Score: 1


      This is a question of "bang for the buck". By making it available for XP they get most of the installed base of windows. There would be additional work to make it work on Windows 2000, and it might not even be remotely possible to make it work on Windows 95/98/Me.

      It also gives their sales force an argument to get the remaining people to upgrade.

      --
      The Internet is full. Go Away!!!
  47. Re:There's a bazillion reasons why IE7 is pushed by whitehatlurker · · Score: 1
    Well, let's accept your argument. IE7 is Microsoft's gift to the world to make up for IE6. (Or possibly IE3.) However, that isn't the question. The real question is "why isn't this brilliant new security feature / standards-compatible browser being automatically installed for the Japanese until the new year?"

    The claim seems to be that IE7 is being delayed for issues of compatibility. Okay, that may be reasonable. Your argument is that the benefits trump the loss of compatibility everywhere, other than in Japan.

    Disclaimer: I installed the last beta versions of IE7 on my office computer, even used it a bit. I still haven't accepted the auto-update to put the full version on my home computers, partly because it was a pain upgrading the beta. [Reboot twice when the software's already on the box???] (Besides, I use Opera, the wife uses Seamonkey, neither of us use IE to any great extent, and IE has to ask permission to use the internet on all my machines. Why bother upgrading it?)

    --
    .. paranoid crackpot leftover from the days of Amiga.
  48. Simple. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    About the time the patch would come to be installed, there was a japanese crowd which came running, followed by a very loud roar, very, very frightening.

    A guy was desperate crying: "Mojira! Mojira!"

    M$, having admitted they lost to Linux, thought better and decided to not meddle in the affairs of dragons...

  49. Re:There's a bazillion reasons why IE7 is pushed by Shados · · Score: 1

    Sorry, my argument was only related to the pseudo-conspiracy theories people have been pushing around. I don't have an answer as to why its not being pushed in Japan. Japanese have fairly different business process than most of the rest of the world, work in environments 10x more stressful than most of the rest of us, have a weirdo 4-mode written language, and are very involved in the tech world. So maybe their problems were bigger, and their voice louder.

    Normally from my experience, Microsoft tends to listen a lot to their certified developers and partners, so this seems to just show that the Japanese were raising hell for one reason or another, while the rest didn't have -too- much problem (relatively speaking) than they did. Either that, or there were large issues with the japanese localisation (thats my guess actualy).

  50. PC Relocator by AlohaBob. Au Revoir Bob by Microso by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I believe that's the secretive vista transfer microsoft has had in it's pocket for awhile, it seems the last two years over there have had them buying and transitioning a lot of good apps to windows branded products, which have adobe and mcaffe/norton running around.

  51. IE7 oh oh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    found it interesting that ie7 is not compatible with the most current version of EPO (mcafee's antivirus management software). Not so good if you can't tell if your company is patched to the latest DAT files. I guess we would be expected to use SMS instead. Hope no one learns the hard way the basic rule of thumb that has never failed. Never adopt anything pre sp1. For everyone else out there that tests MS in the real world and irons out the first set of patches bundled up in SP1, thank you for all your hard work. Cheers.

  52. Ya but they don't by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    Never ceases to amaze me how many IT people like to do nothing then act like it's someone else's fault when shit comes out. I'm seeing that with Vista. A number of IT people in other departments are not testing it hardly at all. They say "Well it's not even out yet and when it does come out I'm not deploying it for a long time." Right except that ignores that professors will be buying systems and those systems will come with Vista. Guaranteed these guys get caught with their pants down on at least one issue.

    It's just life, I'm afraid. Many people dislike change so they just kinda drag their feet on things.

  53. CCA and IE7 by Adam9 · · Score: 1

    The beta versions of IE7 did not work with Cisco Clean Access 3.5/3.6, but the IE7 RC1+ does work with CCA 3.5/3.6. All versions of IE7 work with CCA 4.0.

  54. Reason why it got postponed on my Corporation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On my corporation (big American multinational) we got an e-mail from the CIO telling that the update for IE 7.0 would be delayed until further notice. That was because IE 7.0 broke some intranet core websites, which we should be able to access on a daily basis.

  55. We had to block it ... by darkuni · · Score: 1

    I work for a state government agency, and we have blocked the automatic deployment of IE7 because we've found TONS of our applications that break under it. It isn't just bullshit - IE7 breaks stuff. We haven't determined why yet, but we can't have mass deployment until we completely understand the dynamics of it.

  56. Re:There's a bazillion reasons why IE7 is pushed by Stormwatch · · Score: 1
    Its an feature in Windows Vista. All programs => Accessories => Accessibility => Time Manipulation
    Damnit, Microsoft simply won't stop ripping off Apple!
  57. Release Notes Tell All? by megabyte405 · · Score: 1

    Well, according to the release notes you apparently must install an optional addon before installing IE7 on a Japanese system (for it to even work? This is unclear...), and you can't install it after. That sounds like a good enough reason to me to not force it out: what percentage of folks will have that prereq? (I know I don't, and hadn't even heard of it.) I am not even sure what that has to do with Japanese systems especially, but if it's in the release notes, it must be pretty serious.

    Seems logical enough for me.

    --
    I recognize people by their sigs. Is that a bad thing?
  58. Stupid IT staff != Microsoft's fault by staticdaze · · Score: 1
    It seems to me many business users here in North America wanted it to be delayed as well, but were forced to scramble and deploy IE 7 blocking software

    So let me get this straight...the IT staff at said companies:
    • Failed to test IE7 during beta, knowing that it was on the way (to avoid the "scramble")
    • Had their machines configured to blindly download and install all "high priority" updates
    • Have never heard of Windows Server Update Services

    Windows has no shortage of faults, but don't blame Microsoft when the computers are controlled by an inept system administrator.
    1. Re:Stupid IT staff != Microsoft's fault by Douglas+Goodall · · Score: 1

      Who do you think you are? If people don't fall on their knees and bow before the great Microsoft, you resort to name calling? Some people just don't feel like doing it the Microsoft way. That's why there are alternative operating systems and browsers, thank the gods. I am just kind of tired of being wagged around by Microsoft. I don't think Basic is the ultimate programming language either.

  59. IE7 breaks sites because it fixes the broken IE6 by KWTm · · Score: 1

    It seems to me that the fact that IE7 breaks things is good, and the fact that IE7 is automatically pushed is also good. Here's why --and, no, I'm not trying to be sarcastic.

    We've long known that the dominant browser on people's desktops is a broken IE that is a nightmare for Web designers trying to be standards-compliant. IE7 is a lot more standards-compliant than IE6, to the point that it readily breaks web sites that were designed for IE6. Presumably it brings it much more in line with "real" browsers like, Safari, Opera, Konqueror, etc. [1]. I actually think it's a good thing that millions of web developers cried out in terror at the incompatible web sites, and were suddenly silenced by this realization: it was because they had been following the WRONG standard of IE6, and now they could finally start following some web standards.

    Moreover, it's easy to lapse into a procrastinative denial, saying, "Yeah, I know this is incorrect web design, but --hey, everyone's using IE6." Well, now they're not. Thanks to the update, a substantial number of people will be using IE7, like it or not, so if you thought you could get away with cruddy web design because the market share of Firefox is only 0.01% --well, go have another think.

    You know how certain web sites would say, "Best viewed with Internet Explorer 4 or above --go download yours here"? Well, now you can say, "Best viewed with IE7 --and if you don't have it, go download this."

    Even though I hate Microsoft with a passion (been Linux user for over 3 years now), I think that following the WWW standard at the expense of compatibility is the first truly good thing that Microsoft has done in a long, long time. (Of course, since I don't actually use Microsoft, my info might be all wrong, so please disillusion me as appropriate.)

    -----
    [1] listed in order of passing the ACID2 test, but I might have gotten the order wrong

    --
    404555974007725459910684486621289147856453481154 in hex is "You sank my Battleship?"
    [GPG key in journal]
  60. Re:PC Relocator by AlohaBob. Au Revoir Bob by Micr by Jon-Paul+R · · Score: 1

    Awwww. OK. I'll be sure to check out the link... Well, now you know where they got it from... ;-)

  61. Obligatory THHGTTG Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "But Mr Dent, the plans have been available in the local planning office for the last nine months."

    "Oh yes, well as soon as I heard I went straight round to see them, yesterday afternoon. You hadn't exactly gone out of your way to call attention to them had you? I mean like actually telling anybody or anything."

    "But the plans were on display ..."

    "On display? I eventually had to go down to the cellar to find them."

    "That's the display department."

    "With a torch."

    "Ah, well the lights had probably gone."

    "So had the stairs."

    "But look, you found the notice didn't you?"

    "Yes," said Arthur, "yes I did. It was on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying Beware of the Leopard."

  62. Author has no concept of business deployment by EvilNutSack · · Score: 1

    Since they would be using WSUS (free) with which they can decline/delay the update of IE7 throughout the organisation.

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    --
  63. Re:There's a bazillion reasons why IE7 is pushed by Jesus_666 · · Score: 1

    If security is really the issue, shouldn't they remove IE altogether?

    That's hardly possible; lots of programs rely on MSHTML.

    But how about geting rid of Trident and building an entirely new, clean HTML engine? Or maybe port Tasman to Windows; IE/Mac was always superior to IE/Win.

    --
    USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
  64. off-topic: broken ad-server by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what the fuck is up with these misshapen Flash ads covering up the top half of the page? It can't be deliberate because it clearly breaks the page) so I'm guessing this is a broken ad server losing track of a site's banner size preferences or some such. Whatever it is, it's been going on for several days now... sort it out, Slashdot, for heaven's sake

  65. I installed IE 7 recently by wwphx · · Score: 1

    I had to do an OS reinstall last week and decided, what the heck. Well, IMHO, it sucks. That's perhaps the most horrible GUI interface for a program that I've ever seen. Fortunately all I use it for is doing system updates and managing my web site through Cpanel (which for some reason just doesn't like my Firefox installations).

    Not that I expected it to make my a die-hard IE user, I've never cared much for IE and have been quite happy with FF and NS before it.

    I also installed the latest of Firefox, Windows Media Player, and iTunes. Firefox does one thing that bothers me: putting the stupid close button on the tabs. I much prefer the method used in FF 1.5 and earlier, so I guess it's back to Ctrl-F4 for now. If I had the time, I'd consider writing an add-in that did that, but I imagine someone will. WMP is certainly a lot more attractive, but not enough to really wow me. iTunes is the least radically changed and I have no probs with it (I prefer WMP for ripping MP3s and iTunes for playing them).

    --
    When you sympathize with stupidity, you start thinking like an idiot.
    1. Re:I installed IE 7 recently by 3770 · · Score: 1

      I always use the middle click anywhere in the tab to close the tab. I also dislike the close button because it uses up some space, but I guess some users have an easier time closing tabs with it.

      --
      The Internet is full. Go Away!!!
    2. Re:I installed IE 7 recently by jibjibjib · · Score: 1

      The middle click doesn't seem to work on my Linux box though.

  66. "Blocking Software"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is the article poster talking about? Blocking Software to stop the IE7 update?

    Is he refering to that blocking software called "Active Directory Policy"?

    It never ceases to amaze me how little people who bash Microsoft know about Windows and how it works. I have tons of complaints about Windows, but if you are going to whine and complain, it's probably best not to cite a problem with such a simple, basic solution.

    1. Re:"Blocking Software"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You guys are missing the point of this story.

      IE7 is available for Europe, U.S and Japan to freely download from MS website.

      But for some bizare reason MS have decided to single out Japan from the rollout of Auto Update and delay them by 6 months.

      Their reasoning is because some corporates are not ready for it. But hang on, that's what the IE7 blocker tool is for.

      The bun-fight going on over at the MS blog here: http://blogs.msdn.com/ie/archive/2006/11/02/first- wave-of-localized-ie7-releases-now-available.aspx# comments ... are accusing MS of being racist, as they have singled out Japan and are treating them differently than everyone else by denying them the Auto Update. In anyones book, if you treat a culture differently to another, that is racism. MS then reacted by deleting blog comments where they have been accused of racism, instead of replying to the genuine questions and concerns.

  67. The Revenge of the MS by Kichigai+Mentat · · Score: 1

    MS is snubbing Japan because Japan snubbed the XBox. Just that simple: Billy's jealous, so he's going to make Japan wait. ;)

    --
    Rawr