The phoning home, stealth update of installer leaves me with a feeling of Microsoft serving thier interests and not the buyers/users/mine.
I might would upgrade if I trusted Microsoft a little more.
Please quit the installer and install on a supported system" in plain English terms, if you will. In this case, is there a way to still get it to run or is this Microsoft's method of saying: "This product does not run on Vista SP2." I thought I might add Virtual PC said for Home Edition that it "wasn't supported", yet it still ran. I thought that I might add I have tried to install this on Windows XP with Service Pack 3 installed, after which I get the message/dialog reading "Windows Internet Explorer Platform Preview does not support any operating system earlier than Windows Secondly, would Microsoft ever accept porting IE9 to Windows XP-and if not, why? I'm genuinely Windows XP is still a popular OS by usage, though Windows 7 has been widely accepted as the OS of choice, and Windows XP still is an option on most notebooks. Despite its flaws, Internet Explorer 8 improves on the last edition.Would it be possible to put Internet Explorer 9 on Windows XP Home Edition or Professional with Service Pack 3-officially? Some also dislike the amount of space that it takes up in comparison to other web browsers. When it suggests sites for you, you may face privacy issues with the site already knowing info about you. Its web slices and similar services record and monitor your activity for Microsoft and remain tied to your account. With this feature, IE 8 will show you a list of sites that you might like based on your most recent online activity. This lets you search the web, view sites and even download content without others seeing that info in the computer's history. If you share your computer with other people, you'll love the inPrivate Browsing feature. If IE 8 recognizes a site has fraudulent or harmful, it will keep you from loading that page, which cuts down on your risks of losing confidential information or accidentally installing a virus on your computer.
If you want to see if the temperature in your area changed in the last hour, you can view a web slice to see The Weather Channel website without viewing the full site.Īnother helpful feature is its SmartScreen filter. Users also like the web slices that let them view updated information without loading a full page. Though this feature is common on other browsers, it is available for the first time on IE 8. When you want to learn more about a term or word, simply highlight it, right click on your mouse and choose the option to search. One of the newer features found on IE 8 is an accelerator. Those tools let you bookmark a single window or an entire row of tabs, print the page you're on, zoom in on the page and do plenty of other things. Using the drop down menu at the top of the screen helps you access tools and extra features. If you visited the site in the past, IE 8 will remember it and show you the URL in a pop down window underneath the address bar.
Type in the URL of any site in that bar to access that site. The first thing you'll notice is the simple address bar at the very top. After listening to the complaints that users had, Microsoft worked hard to create Internet Explorer 8, which comes with more of the features that you want in a web browser. It is the default browser for Windows devices and comes installed on millions of those devices every year. Whether you use a browser like Firefox, you probably used IE in the past. Finding the right web browser can be challenging, but Internet Explorer 8 comes with many of the features you want in one convenient package.