Say your goodbyes to Internet Explorer.
Say your goodbyes to Internet Explorer
Microsoft is putting Internet Explorer (mostly) out of its misery in 2022, when the company ends mainstream support for the aging browser.
On Wednesday, the company announced the official retirement date: “With Microsoft Edge capable of assuming this responsibility and more, the Internet Explorer 11 desktop application will be retired and go out of support on June 15, 2022, for certain versions of Windows 10."
At that point, the IE11 desktop application will be disabled and redirect to Microsoft Edge, the company added in an FAQ about the shutdown.
Originally launched in 1995, the much-maligned Internet Explorer has long been irrelevant in today’s consumer market. It currently holds a measly 3.8 percent share of the desktop browser space. Google’s Chrome dominates with a nearly 70 percent share.
But surprisingly, Microsoft has continued bundling Internet Explorer 11 in Windows 10, even as the company has been heavily promoting Edge to consumers. That’s because a lot of older, enterprise software or websites only work with IE. According to a Microsoft commissioned-survey, companies on average use 1,678 legacy apps.
Nevertheless, last year Microsoft began signaling the end of Internet Explorer when it announced Microsoft 365 office applications would no longer run on the browser as of August 2021. To compensate, the company is encouraging users still reliant on IE to use the “Internet Explorer mode” found on Edge.
“With Microsoft Edge, we provide a path to the web’s future while still respecting the web’s past,” the company wrote in Wednesday’s announcement. “Change was necessary, but we didn’t want to leave reliable, still-functioning websites and applications behind.”
In a video, Microsoft also said 99.7 percent of apps are compatible with the newest versions of its products. For apps that don't work, Redmond is encouraging enterprises to contact the company, and promising that its engineers will fix the issue "at no additional cost."
If you must have IE, the good news is that Internet Explorer 11 will remain available for users of Windows 10 Long-Term Servicing Channel and via the Server Internet Explorer 11 desktop applications. In addition, the company plans to continue to support the MSHTML Trident engine behind IE11.
Still, Microsoft’s announcement goes on to list the various reasons why organizations should adopt Edge over IE to access their legacy applications and websites. A big reason is security. “While Internet Explorer 11 packaged security updates monthly, Microsoft Edge can issue security patches for immediate vulnerabilities within days, if not hours,” the company said.
At the same time, Microsoft is trying to nudge enterprises away from IE entirely. The company notes the Internet Explorer mode in Edge will last only until at least 2029. “Additionally, Microsoft will give one year of notice before retiring the IE mode experience when the time comes,” it said.
This article originally published at PCMag here
literally didn’t even know it still existed ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
ReplyDeleteI haven't used it in years and I won't miss it!
ReplyDeleteGood, don't use it anyway
ReplyDeleteInternet explorer will get the news in 2025
ReplyDeleteNext is Mozilla Firefox or Google Chrome Whatever.
ReplyDeleteYou did decent, friend 👍👍
ReplyDeleteLMAO
ReplyDeleteFinally!!!
ReplyDeleteSo it'll finally be off of your computers by 2050.
ReplyDeleteThe library put it out of it's misery in 2015.
ReplyDeleteHaha, yeah. We totally weren't still using it on our computers right up until the pandemic or anything... >_>
DeleteWhat’s Internet Explorer?
ReplyDeletei assumed they renamed IE "edge" because the icon is pretty much the same
DeleteI remember a laptop I bought years ago had both Explorer and Edge. At the time, I just assumed Edge was a mobile browser with less functionality.
DeleteUnfortunately super important still.
DeleteI’m positive I haven’t touched that browser in at least a decade. Doesn’t mean it’s bad, but decision to avoid it has been a conscious one.
Deleteoh it's really bad. the main problem is how it serves as the way that 3rd party software accesses the internet by default. For us software creators, it's a big old problem.
DeleteThat’s what I was thinking, it’s still a necessary tool for developers and such.
DeleteI think you use it to download Chrome
ReplyDeletehttps://media.giphy.com/media/3ofT5PzgI9FSn8vPaw/giphy.gif
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