Microsoft is to finally give Windows 7 users the chance to use Internet Explorer 10 (IE10), months after it was officially released with Windows 8 last October.
The browser was released worldwide on 26 February in 95 languages for both the 32- and 64-bit versions of the popular desktop OS.
Although the browser has taken a back seat to Windows 8’s new tiled interface, touch-enabled features and new app store, IE10 is nonetheless one of the operating system’s most critical features as it represents Microsoft’s attempt to reclaim its lead in the browser wars.
Last May, Google achieved the once-daunting goal of unseating IE. According to StatCounter, a Web metrics firm, Chrome surpassed IE during that month, effectively becoming the world’s most popular browser.
Today, the software maker is hoping that Windows 7’s massive user base will give IE10 the momentum it needs to put some distance between it and Google Chrome – and to a lesser extent, Mozilla Firefox. The way to fend off the competition is to make big strides in browser performance.
In an MSDN Blog post, Internet Explorer group program manager Rob Mauceri, spelled out what Windows 7 users can expect from the not-so-new browser. “As with Windows 8, IE10 on Windows 7 improves performance across the board with faster page loading, faster interactivity and faster JavaScript performance, while reducing CPU usage and improving battery life on mobile PCs,” he wrote.
According to the company’s own tests, users should notice a snappier, faster Web experience, said Mauceri. “In measurements in our performance lab, IE loads real-world pages up to 20 percent faster in top sites for news, social, search, e-commerce and more,” he stated.
To prove that IE10 is up to the rigors of today’s deeply interactive, HTML5-powered Websites, Microsoft has launched a new Minesweeper online demo that tests browser performance. “The game uses standards-based mark-up for interoperability across browsers, and makes the most of fully hardware-accelerated browsers like IE10 on both Windows 7 and Windows 8, with consistent performance across a wide range of devices, including tablets like the Surface RT,” noted Mauceri.
Expect improved JavaScript performance, as well. Mauceri asserted that “with IE10 on Windows 7, performance on the WebKit SunSpider JavaScript benchmark improves by 25 percent over IE9 and leads the industry and other browsers by 17 percent.”
Microsoft is also eager to let Web developers know that it has turned a corner on Web standards.
Long derided for spotty Web standards support, the company said that IE10 features a “60 percent increase in supported modern Web standards.” These include expanded CSS3 support, HTML5 Forms and HTML5 Sandboxing, among several other Web application enhancements.
Among the reasons to use IE10, Microsoft lists quality-of-life improvements like smarter browser tabs and built-in spell check along with privacy-enhancing features including do-not-track support, which is turned on by default.
How well do you know web browsers? Try our quiz!
Originally published on eWeek.
Group of news publishers in Canada become the latest group to sue OpenAI for allegedly…
CEO Pat Gelsinger has been “retired” effective 1 December, after the board of directors reportedly…
World spanning subsea cable measuring 40,000km (or 24,854 mile) long, reportedly being planned by Meta…
More legal trouble. Canada's Competition Bureau sues Google for alleged anti-competitive conduct in online advertising
As social media ban passes, Australian government is accused by Meta of failing to consider…
Is it enough? After Intel disappointment, Germany to offer approximately 2 billion euros in subsidies…
View Comments
It's been available to Windows 7 users for ages as a release preview. I've been running it for many months.............
I am using W8 and was using IE10. IE kept freezing up with a message "IE is not responding." This went on all the time, so I decided to start using Chrome. Bingo!!! Browser has not frozen up once using Chrome. Not once.
Sending the problem to Microsoft never got a response or a fix. I will just stick with Chrome.