Waikato Times

Internet Explorer bows out

- Alan Martin This article was first published at thebit.nz.

For most people, the news that Internet Explorer died on Wednesday will come as an enormous surprise – not because it was in the prime of its life, but because it was presumed dead years ago.

But no, earlier this week it was still technicall­y a product supported by Microsoft – albeit not with very much enthusiasm.

Although Internet Explorer was included with Windows 10 in 2015, Microsoft really wanted you to use its (then) new Chromium based browser, Edge, instead. Indeed, anybody who has made the upgrade to Windows 11 will find that all traces of Internet Explorer have already been removed.

Microsoft feels comfortabl­e making this move thanks to IE mode in Edge. ‘‘Microsoft Edge has Internet Explorer mode [IE mode] built in, so you can access those legacy Internet Explorer-based websites and applicatio­ns straight from Microsoft Edge,’’ the company said last month.

Surprising­ly, however, people are still using it – and possibly more than you’d think. According to Lansweeper (via TechRadar), 47% of Windows 10 devices still use Internet Explorer as their web browser and will need to switch to Edge, or be at the mercy of malware nasties.

But old habits die hard, and if you have been a loyal Internet Explorer customer since day one, you’ve been using the browser for close to 30 years.

Originally released as an addon for Windows 95 in 1995 when only a handful of people were chatting to each other on usenet groups, usage ultimately peaked in 2003 when nearly 95% of internet users were connecting via it. After that, it was a story of slow decline as the likes of Firefox, Safari and Google Chrome gobbled up its market share on mobiles and desktops, before it lost number one spot in 2012.

Indeed, it’s worth mentioning a few of the sites that weren’t around to see Internet Explorer at its peak: Facebook (2004), YouTube (2005), Reddit (2005), Twitter (2006) and Instagram (2012).

So farewell, Internet Explorer: you may well look at that list of websites and reflect that Chrome is welcome to all of it. That’s Edge’s problem, now.

 ?? ?? It’s the end of an era for Microsoft’s Internet Explorer.
It’s the end of an era for Microsoft’s Internet Explorer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand