Internet Explorer 8, 9, and 10 Reach End-of-Life Next Week (thenextweb.com)
An anonymous reader writes: On Tuesday, January 12, Microsoft Internet Explorer 8, 9, and 10 will officially reach their end of life. A new patch going live soon will add a notification that nags users to upgrade. "What's even bigger about the end of life for these versions is that this means Internet Explorer 11 is the last version of Microsoft's old browser that's left supported, as the company continues to transition customers to Edge on Windows 10."
Edge sucks (no ad-block)
Will a petition do the trick? The quality-of-life for everyone on the planet would improve by an order of magnitude if we could EOL Microsoft entirely and move on to a FOS OS that doesn't go through your underwear drawer at night when you're sleeping.
For Microsoft, "End-of-life" means more control over users by forcing them to use new software that makes Microsoft's methods more dominant. My opinion, shared by many others.
This would mean that IE9 will remain supported on Vista. According to Windows lifecycle fact sheet, Vista's support doesn't end until April 2017, and IE9 is the most current version of Internet Explorer available for Vista.
MS Windows Vista is supposed to get security updates until April 2017, but they can't get IE10 or 11, and now IE9 is end-of-life. Keep that in mind when Microsoft promises to "support your device through its lifetime" or whatever bullshit.
What accessibility bug?
If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
the company continues to transition customers to Edge on Windows 10."
Internet Explorer is NOT being discontinued anytime soon. There are a number of devices, enterprises, corporations and government entities that still use software written is god awful proprietary models such as ActiveX and still need to be available until they move away. Add to that the number of web services with NTLM support and you increase the number of users still needing IE.
So the reality is that Edge is being pushed as the browser for 99% of users. IE is still available in Windows 10 but is not "in your face" like Edge is.
Nope . There is still something called Flash.
as outlined by microsofts official policy, the transition path is to follow:
OEM-Vendors: will continue bundling IE10 with no fewer than 32,768 OEM specific plug-ins and search bars, as per "the agreement."
home users: through the dark caverns of innumerable bonzi buddies and search helpers, and through the cloistered mass of trojans and activeX malware, Windows will at first notify, then plead, then insist, and finally quietly download and install Edge with, or without your knowledge. You are to verbally complain (with or without audience) that either "someone changed my icons" or "the internet button isnt working."
Embedded applications: checkout appliances, billboards, interactive kiosks, computerized lathes and mills, and medical devices will continue to run Internet Explorer 3.0 until the last star falls from the heavens or the last operator dives from a major skyscraper.
Banking institutions: please continue to ensure browsers conform to at least windows explorer. The version clearly doesnt matter. Hell, just getting the name to stick with you guys is an accomplishment
Doris in finance: please install the final pinochle/oprah book club toolbar to your barely recognizeable "browser." Doing so will collapse the waveform and upon its arrival, shear the very fabric of reality and spacetime into what you may perceive as a perfect game of web solitare but which is in actuality the very embodiment of a digital christ, if you will. The singularity now ushered upon us, we may finally become one with infinity through your divine portal. The bonzi buddy will confirm this with his signature "flip"
Good people go to bed earlier.
Like the Mozilla release party .
And still other OSs with issues too. Just one announced now on /.
http://tech.slashdot.org/story...
What is actually happening is:
"Beginning January 12, 2016, only the most current version of Internet Explorer available for a supported operating system will receive technical support and security updates. Please visit the Internet Explorer Support Lifecycle Policy FAQ here http://support.microsoft.com/g... for list of supported operating systems and browser combinations."
So if you are running Vista SP2, which supports only up to IE9, you are still OK, it is still supported, as shown at the Internet Explorer Support Lifecycle Policy FAQ link above. Running Server 2012 (Not R2), then IE10 is still supported. Yes the article is valid for the operating systems they are referring to, but it doesn't paint a complete picture of what is going on for all of Microsoft's operating systems. Older IEs are supported for some operating systems, just not the two mentioned in the article.
Why would you disable UAC?
Do you log in to your Linux boxes as root and do everything as a super user? Why would you do that on Windows?
My eyes reflect the stars and a smile lights up my face.
Who really cares if "support" for these fossils stop? Who has any reason to ever use a Microsoft browser when there is Chrome, Firefox, Opera, Safari, and other better solutions? Is anyone really planning to use Edge? What troglodyte is still developing any server feed that requires using a Microsoft browser?
My IT Department has been pushing out IE11 across all the corporate offices for months, and the IT Apps have been working since last year to make sure all custom apps work with it. SAP/Oracle was the only issue, but work around came as it was an industry standard.
We have daily quotas to hit home users who vpn in, to make sure they are upgraded, since they dont run AD login scrips. Its been quite the wack-a-mole to get all users upgraded.
And last year was the EOL of XP too, that was a fun rollout of new upgraded os/hardware rollouts across the entire company. I even ended up helping deploying new workstations on peoples desks. Even with the hired temps, we didnt have enough manpower to do it.
Been a busy 2015 for IT.
I mean, I understand how MS is doing this, where "the latest version of IE that can run on your supported OS is still supported" .... but here's the thing? People out there building new web sites for the masses are NOT going to waste time making sure they render perfectly on IE 8 or 9, in most cases. If they work, great... But the bulk of the QA testing is going to happen around the latest version of the browser (IE 11) -- and even that may die out with more emphasis placed on pages working well in "Edge" and Win 10.
So seems to me, in the "real world", the people sticking with using an older IE like 8 or 9 are doing so purposely, because they run older web-based applications or internal Intranet sites/portals that were coded specifically for those browser versions. We've already reached the point where you're stuck using an old version of a Microsoft OS just so you can keep doing that. So whether MS declares the old browsers "unsupported" or "supported" means little more than a technicality. (If I was MS, I would do this "dance" about supported versions too, just because I wouldn't want to deal with headaches from some idiot still on Vista who refuses to spend a buck to upgrade it, and now wants to argue over what "extended support for Vista" really means.) But are these people really all worried about missing a few security patches from MS for those old IE versions? Heck -- there's more inherent security weakness in using IE vs. an alternative browser!
Essentially, you should be using IE 11 or an alternative browser like Chrome or FireFox for everything at this point, *unless* you're in some weird "edge case" scenario where you still need outdated software to work with other outdated software you can't live without. Those situations will ALWAYS happen, and that's why you can still download a freeware CP/M emulator for Windows and other oddball apps like that. MS may as well realistically call all IE browsers before 11 "dead" and let people do as they wish with them.
What's bad about the metro UI in 2012?
I personally find it convenient. Configured it once and bam, all administrative tools are in one place and organized. The day you need something not in there you just deal with it...
Uh, yes, that's correct. Instead of "keeping people safe", it probably has more to do with the developers at Microsoft not wanting to make changes to 4 different versions of their software across multiple operating systems when they could only do it to 1. If you're concerned about safety at all then maybe consider using a browser that was released within the past 3 years instead of counting on Microsoft to hold your hand.
"Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
why not nuke it from orbit, it's the only way to be sure.
I was a Linux and Firefox user for many years. I would help regular people install Firefox, and even Ubuntu from time to time.
I don't know what happened, but all of a sudden so many open source projects went really stupid. Firefox went from being very usable to having a junk UI in just a few releases, and it hasn't gotten any better. GNOME 3 is totally unusable. Unity is shit, too.
I finally got fed up when something called systemd started screwing up my computer with each update. I wasted far too many hours debugging various bugs and problems involving systemd. In all my years of using several different Linux distros I pretty much never had a problem with the init system. Then systemd got involved and I'd run into problems all the time!
So when my computer had some hardware problems, I opted to get a Surface tablet thing instead. I didn't have high hopes, but I have been pleasantly surprised! Windows 10 generally works very well for me. I've never had a single problem booting my Surface. It just works. I even started using Edge, and I've been very surprised by it, too. It's fast, sites work well in it, and its UI is better than Firefox's.
If you had asked me 3 years ago what OS and browser I'd be using in 2016, I would've told you Linux and Firefox. But alas here I am using Windows 10 and Edge. And you know what? I'm actually happy with them both. They've improved over time, while Linux, Firefox, and the open source desktops have gotten worse.
I want to use and I want to support open source software, but it just can't compete any longer. Things were looking so good for it. Linux was becoming a real option as a total replacement for Windows and OS X, but then so many open source projects just went totally stupid, ruining what was such a good thing.
Instead of admitting how bad things have gotten, I'm sure that some people here will just accuse me of being a "shill". Well I'm not getting paid by anybody to say that Windows 10 and Edge are now better than Linux and Firefox. I'm saying that because it's the unfortunate truth!
Every time i reboot my computer it tries to install "Internet Explorer 10 for Windows 7 for x64-based Systems" (despite the fact that i can run IE and it claims to be version 10) and gets a 9C48 error, and it also tries to install "Internet Explorer 11 for Windows 7 for x64-based Systems" and gets a 9C59 error. Plus a lot of the time after that the system will slow to a crawl as it deals with a ton of "WindowsWcpStoreCorruption" errors for about an hour. It won't let me install Windows 10, but it's not listed in the updates so i can try to uninstall it and do a fresh install. There is a "Windows Internet Explorer 9" but it won't let me uninstall that. (Or rather, it will let me try, but it never works.) I've tried at least a half-dozen fixes suggested on various Microsoft forums and none of them have worked.
I wouldn't actually care (well, aside from the "slowing to a crawl" thing) except this is on a work machine and i need to use IE for some things for compatibility reasons. I figure at this point i'm going to have to get IT to reinstall the OS (unless i can talk them into just giving me a new machine. =) Isn't having the OS tightly integrated with a browser just great? =P
This Space Intentionally Left Blank
Funny, Edge seems to run just fine for me with UAC disabled.
(stolen from DaBum) I am dyslexia of borg - your ass will be laminated.
No start button without installing a 3rd party app. Hot corners are a bitch to use through a windowed VNC-style interface, or through Hyper-v Machine viewer. No easy way to get a nice alphabetical list of installed programs for when I can't remember what the program was called. Try having several versions of SQL Management tools installed and picking the right one from the truncated titles displayed in Metro. Server Manager starts crashing randomly until server is rebooted (Doesn't seem to happen in R2) I also can't replicate between 2012r2 servers purchased months after the 2012 servers were installed.
At least 2012R2 should still be widely used in production for another 5-8 years, but never getting any improvements to the OS on 2012r1, even just 1 or 2 years after release is going to make those installs get worse and worse to manage over time, just like 2008r1, aka Vista Server.
I'm done beta testing windows server products in production.
This cracks me up, since the unemployment claims website says "This site is compatible with the Internet Explorer browser versions 5-9 only". Makes me wonder what they are running under the hood, and just how vulnerable the system is. Netcraft says IIS 6.0 on win2k3.
And then launch said cement case straight into the Sun.
So long, older Internet Explorer versions. Don't let the door kick you on the ass on your way out.
There's still IE11 to deal with, but it doesn't suck as much as the older versions.
All users have to do is upgrade to the latest version and they will continue to get patches. This will only affect users running old versions of IE on versions of Windows that can run a newer version.
At least with Windows, you can be sure that there will be a driver for each piece of hardware in your computer for the version of Windows that came with it. GNU/Linux, on the other hand, doesn't ship on PCs available in major retail chains. Mail-order GNU/Linux PC brands such as System76 have two problems: you're buying sight unseen with no way to test the screen or keyboard, and because of their lack of volume, they're usually a lot more expensive than a Windows PC of comparable size.
Until you end up on video sites that say "Please reenable Flash" on those browsers for which the site doesn't say "Please install our app".
Do you log in to your Linux boxes as root and do everything as a super user?
Some Debian users do. Debian doesn't set up sudo by default, instead expecting users to log in as root using a password chosen during installation. They log in as root, make changes, and log out. Ubuntu, on the other hand, doesn't create a root password during installation but instead sets up sudo to create a similar elevation flow to OS X and Windows 6+.
The quality-of-life for everyone on the planet would improve by an order of magnitude if we could EOL Microsoft entirely and move on to a FOS OS
Why do you care what anyone uses?
Because without a broad user base on a Free operating system, developers of applications and hardware peripherals are unlikely to spend much effort on making their products compatible with a Free operating system.
http://saveie6.com/
because I don't like being asked a million times whether I really want to do every stupid little random thing.
UAC is an abomination unto the gods, may it burn eternally in the pit of fire.
The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
Richard Stallman was right about one thing.
If Windows disappeared, then manufacturers would release drivers primarily for Linux, and applications would be written primarily for Linux.
By "Linux" did you mean GNU/Linux or Android? Because I've already seen a lot of application developers forgo a Windows desktop application in favor of one for Android. (Case in point: Try signing up for an account to comment on Instagram pictures or chat with WhatsApp users without a major smartphone sometime.) And if GNU/Linux, then why it and not OS X or iOS?
I hear they also use computers, and drive cars.
because this somehow affects you, you should probably stay inside.
no wait, they also live in houses and apartments. you should go outside.
doh! they like going outdoors! I guess your screwed.
The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
I refuse to use iOS because Apple has root, not me.
People who disagree with the maker of a phone or game console having root are unfortunately outnumbered.
Manufacturers will continue to avoid OSX for the same reason they do now: all OSX hardware is built by one company.
All internal hardware is built by one company. But through USB and Thunderbolt, Apple has provided plenty of space outside the case for third-party peripherals. A lot more peripheral packaging advertises support for OS X than for "Linux" (presumably GNU/Linux).
rather than a government that supports the rich and powerful (dictatorship of the rich)
The word you're looking for is "oligarchy".
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According to the latest ruleset, this post should be modded as Vorpal Flamebait +5.
I don't mind being in the minority.
The problem with being in the minority is that the products on which you rely are likely to end up discontinued. A minority preferred 10-inch low-cost laptop PCs, but they were discontinued at the end of 2012.
Enterprises will continue to do whatever the fuck they want anyway.
Double tap!
Most linux users don't know this, but the man pages were named after Chuck Norris. Chuck Norris fsck'ing hates noobs!
.... but it doesn't run on the (true) Administrator account (when you activate it).
Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
It's funny because every single point made here is true, but Google has managed to surpass all of them over the years. That's a company whose slogan used to be "do no evil". The market is so messed up, Microsoft and "Raging Bull" Ballmer seem tame in comparison to the likes of Schmidt and Zuckerberg. What a time to be alive.
Plutocracy is probably closer to correct.
No one in his right mind would claim security has to be cheap or easy.
"The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
This IE 11 news brings back recent memories of applying "Important" updates to a fresh install of Windows 7. IE 11 was the final update in the most frustrating experience I have ever had with software. For many users including me, Windows 7 hangs on "searching for updates". So to fix this you manually apply a Knowledge Base patch/fix (KB123-blah-blah). Microsoft does not know if this patch will work but recommends you give it a try. I does not work so you apply another one. Rinse and repeat.
Finally if your lucky you fix this and windows starts downloading updates. But some of the updates fail. So you apply (KB234-blah-blah). Rinse and repeat, Rinse and repeat. OK a few updates are applied but the original problem is back: Windows 7 hangs on "searching for updates". Wow!... Apply KB. Rinse and repeat, Rinse and repeat. To add to the frustration is eternal reboots and slowness.
I've never experienced this level of frustration with Linux. Not even close. Windows is a black box. Or more accurately, a black hole. And if you're wondering, I'm not installing this Windows 7 for myself thank goodness.
Disclaimer: I do not use MS products.
Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
Petition to save IE6!
IE6 has been the victim of false and misleading accusations all over the web, such as complaints about its compatibility with web standards. This is simply the confused ramblings of a vocal minority. After all, how can IE6 be violating standards when it has essentially BEEN the standard for years?
The SaveIE6 campaign is all about showing the world the benefits of using the web browser IE6. There are currently too many browsers with too many unnecessary features. They are hard to use and render web sites badly and inconsistently. Contrast this with IE6â(TM)s proven technology and well-documented behavior.
Please support the SaveIE6 campaign and help make the internet a better place!
You can help out here: http://www.saveie6.com/
-grin-
Good to see that they didn't EOL IE 6... forever!
I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
And still you come across sites that demand to be read only with IE 8. Stupidity is apparently a widely held human trait.
Organization? You must be joking..
That browser too is a steaming pile of junk. Slow and nasty. More of the same. Just retire IE & Edge completely - it's trash - has it ever been good? I guess not, 11 versions of crap - AWESOME MICROSOFT!
It's like space-travel "imagine were we'd been ..."
Until Edge supports Inbox by Gmail and AdBlock Plus, I am sticking with Chrome. Personally I haven't used Firefox in years, way to bloated. I'm a long time Linux user, but I must say Edge is pretty nice.
Make SELinux enforcing again!
Unfortunately, lots of large enterprises have so much in-house crapware written that works only on IE 8 or 9 that they aren't going to be allowing their employees off IE for a long time. The medical industry, oil, banking all fell into the Microsoft-only trap and can't get out.
So your domain admin has made it so all newly-inserted USB devices need administrator approval before being used, and you blame that on UAC, because that's what you see causing problems. That means you don't understand UAC and domains. Good work!
I feel like you're doing it wrong.
In the early days of UAC on Vista, you are right, it was a pain. But things have gotten much better since then. Microsoft has improved UAC and app writers are more aware of UAC and design their software around it.
UAC is actually a clever feature, imo and it is invaluable from an network admin perspective because it allows on-the-fly privilege escalation much like sudo. Yes, I know you can use runas or the Explorer context menu, but the automatic prompting is nice.
All of my own family members whose Windows boxen I take care of have UAC set and run as a standard user. They have instructions to call me when they see the UAC prompt. Guess what? I rarely get calls about this.
My eyes reflect the stars and a smile lights up my face.
Yeah, something is not right here.
I admin a small network of about 150 Windows devices and all of our users are high-end CAD and have multiple monitors. We also allow writing to USB but disallow programs from running from removable drives.
We have *never* had issues like what the GP described.
However, the GP is correct about the "all or nothing" aspect of UAC. Because of this, we use a 3rd party product called DefendPoint (formerly Privilege Guard) which allows us to set domain-wide policy on what can be elevated and by whom. For example, we have a custom written "AppStore" which we allow to run elevated without prompting. This allows our users to install pre-approved applications and updates without the need for me to install it for them.
My eyes reflect the stars and a smile lights up my face.
Not only use it, but it happens to be a core element of our network structure.
I used to be one of those people who disabled UAC immediately. In the Vista days it was bad, no doubt. It has come a long way since then.
I also was the kind of person who would immediately disable SELinux on CentOS boxes until I took the time to learn it and then it was really pretty simple and now I have stronger systems because I run with it enabled.
My eyes reflect the stars and a smile lights up my face.
You are right, but only if you are running as a standard user. Most home users run under an admin account. In this case, running without UAC means that anything that is executed under your account, with or without your knowledge, will be silently elevated to the highest possible permission level.
So, it is especially dangerous to run as admin without UAC. It means that any exploit that manages to make it past your other counter-measures are guaranteed to have the highest privilege level.
My eyes reflect the stars and a smile lights up my face.
I think in part that's because Google isn't the binary code that's turning that pile of hardware in front of you into a usable tool instead of just so much metals and polymers; you don't have to use Google or any of it's products, there are other search engines out there, and other providers of the services that Google offers. On the other hand, for most people, it's Windows or nothing. I hate to make an analogy like this (as poor as it may be), but it's like your local water utility deciding to add things to the water piped into your house that you didn't ask for and can't filter out; you don't have much choice, and the alternatives are problematic at best. Personally I'm in the process of trying to transition away from any version of Windows and use some flavor of Linux, but so far I can't even get the 'Live' version of Ubuntu to run on the old Dell laptop I've got that I wanted to use as a 'trainer' for myself, before planning out the switch-over on my desktop machine; it's stalling the whole process out.
Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
You've read too much vitriol and not enough information. Systemd is a good idea, and necessary, and SysV init was so completely broken that [a] almost all its intended functionality was replaced by other software, and [b] every other UNIX system had already replaced it before systemd was even conceived. The idea that you cannot track processes, or control their resource use, is indescribably braindead.
You keep on deep throating an OS where you can only upgrade to the latest edition if the manufacturer has bothered releasing drivers for it, and you have zero recourse when things fail, and we'll keep using something that is at least fixable.
I'm also going to call you out (every time) for your own personal idiocy in trying to compare a server/workstation OS to a desktop OS. If you are a programmer, you should probably be using Linux. If you are not Linux is going to be, at best, the same as any other OS, and probably worse. Linux is something that is necessary to people developing hardware and software products. It's like criticizing a HMMWV for not being a BMW. I understand in this analogy you're a car dealership and so have your own myopic perspective on what cars should be like, but this thing where you're completely impervious to the real world is getting really tiresome.
Those who advocate genocide deserve every protection afforded by law, and none afforded by common human decency.
That seems like an entirely different thing than "Edge won't run without UAC enabled."
(stolen from DaBum) I am dyslexia of borg - your ass will be laminated.
Yes, I didn't say anything else. Hence staring my phrase with "but".
Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)