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IE7 To Ship With Windows Patches Tomorrow [Not]
Posted by
kdawson
on Mon Oct 09, 2006 12:31 PM
from the ready-or-not dept.
from the ready-or-not dept.
An anonymous reader writes, "Microsoft plans to push out Internet Explorer 7 as a 'high priority update' when it ships security patches tomorrow, according to Washingtonpost.com's Security Fix blog. That means anyone who has Windows configured to download and install patches automagically from Redmond will be greeted with IE7 next time they boot up their machines. In related news, it appears IE's worldwide market share actually increased a couple of points since July, despite a number of high profile zero-day attacks this year." The article notes that the IE7 "containment wall" protected mode will not be available on XP, but only to those who purchase Vista.
Update: 10/09 21:26 GMT by kd : An anonymous reader points to this Microsoft blog posting where it is revealed that the article linked above is incorrect. IE7 will not be pushed tomorrow.
Update: 10/09 21:26 GMT by kd : An anonymous reader points to this Microsoft blog posting where it is revealed that the article linked above is incorrect. IE7 will not be pushed tomorrow.
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Thank God (Score:5, Funny)
Good or bad news for the web developers? (Score:5, Interesting)
Parent
Re:Good or bad news for the web developers? (Score:5, Interesting)
Sure, unless perhaps you know what you are doing [google.com]. Then you can have multiple IEs installed. I have IE5.5, IE6, and IE7 installed on my laptop alongside FF 1.5.whatever so I can do testing. To my right is a dual G5, running safari and ff/mac. IE/mac and Opera aren't even on the radar, the number of visitors using them is statistically insignificant for us. Really that's true of Safari as well but I like to support default web browsers.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
That will break the methods you can use to have different versions of the browser looking at the same content in a way compatible to each of them.
Re: (Score:2)
Ah, that is good information, which I did not have before. Although there are ways to change the useragent, the conditional comment thing is pretty serious.
Guess it's time to make myself more Windows 98 VMs.
Re: (Score:2)
Well, I missed one thing in your list and that's W3C compliance checks. Ra
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It'll be a pain for small-time web shops for a little while, but if IE7 really is going to be pushed out as a high priority, most people will end up getting it relatively quickly.
More serious shops should already have a range of different OS and browser combinations setup for testing; this will only add a couple more. Certainly it's no worse than testing under (eg) a couple of combinations of OS X and Safari, or various distros and various versions
every time I try firefox, I go back. (Score:2, Interesting)
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You are right. I didn't dig deep in obscure menus to kill this annoyance that (1) should not be the in the first place and (2) should have a turn off option right on the pop-up. I know, it's an old glitch. Netscape has had it going WAYYY.... back.
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What sites do you go to that don't work right in Firefox? It's been a long time since I've seen one, though I know a few sites that don't work well in IE6, mostly because of the stupid PNG transparency issue. IE6 is so old and outdated, I don't know how people can stand it.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
HIPAA stands for Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act. It is so commonly misspelled that the link you provided redirects to the appropriate link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HIPAA [wikipedia.org]
Re:Thank God (Score:4, Interesting)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
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Because it's good enough for them.
The article says this month (Score:5, Informative)
Tomorrow seems a likely time to me...
WGA? (Score:5, Interesting)
Praise Allah! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm wondering if it's really an improvement. Can't find them, but a while back there were complaints on /. that IE7 fixed enough things that IE6 hacks won't work anymore, but didn't fix the things that people had used the hacks to fix. I haven't seen this myself (I'm not doing web development these days), but supposedly the result of these "fixes" was that pages that displayed properly in IE6 and Firefox (and maybe other browsers) would not display properly in IE7. Therefore, web developers would have to
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yay! (Score:2)
Even being a long-time Firefox user, I'm looking forward to test it (ya, I know, there were betas, there was a RC, but this is the stable one!)
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And if you believe that, I have a bridge to sell you
Actually, 'Yay!' (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: Fabricated Recommendation? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
That depends on "the job." For Firefox 1.x and Opera 7-8, if "the job" required WYSIWYG text editing or heavy AJAX functionality, then Firefox was the best tool. If "the job" involved highly advanced CSS, then it would have been Opera.
Don't assume everyone uses the web the same way you do. That's the same mentality behind the "Oprah sux b/c it don't have no extenshuns" attitude.
no no no (Score:5, Informative)
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I think it DID say tomorrow, and has since been updated.
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Containment Wall (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
As an occassional web developer (Score:3, Funny)
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Actually, IE7 [edwards.name] is THE solution. Don't confuse it with Internet Explorer v7. IE7 is the best tool a modern web developer can have. It's a JavaScript library that automatically convert standards compliant modern CSS to IE 5+6 workarounds so you can code your pages using clean W3C-compliant CSS2+3 and XHTML and your pages will work fine in IE 6, IE 5.5 and even IE 5.0. It's magic!
Here is [edwards.name]
The article says "could be" (Score:2, Informative)
If you dont want to install it... (Score:4, Informative)
It looks like you have the option to just click "no thanks" when it asks you if you want to upgrade to IE7.
A proposal that cannot be rejected? (Score:2, Insightful)
Tomorrow is not accurate (Score:3, Informative)
For a Firefox user: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Sure:
- Pros: you get the latest Microsoft software that hopefully *fixes* the previous version
- Cons: you get the latest Microsoft software that *hopefully* fixes the previous version
Yay for CSS! (Score:2)
With this news, though, I can go back to writing real CSS! This will save me so much time! The only people who won't be able to see my page properly are people who don't maintain their machines
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
sure it is better than IE6, but don't assume your valid CSS will work OK in IE7, it probably will not.
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No, it won't. IE7 doesn't improve CSS support that much. Yes, they fixed it a bit, but it's mostly the same.
IE7 = tabs + new UI
What I don't understand is why it took them so much time to release this crap. I guess that because IE is tied into XP and so many things depend on it they spent most of the time trying to track down regressions from crappy 3rd progarms
The biggest inconvenience (Score:4, Insightful)
Am I The Only One Concerned? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm sure IE7 is a positive step from IE6, but how big of a resource hog is that shinny new interface? When I updated to Windows Messenger Live (yes I'm aware of the alternatives, but 99% of my friends use it) I couldn't believe how much resources the thing ate up. Right now it's sitting at a ridiculous 48 MB of memory usage.
More to the point, how much of IE7 is integrated into the kernel and how much memory does it consume when I'm not even using it? How does it affect boot times? I'm unlikely to use it for anything I don't have to so I think I'll be avoiding it for as long as possible.
New exploits to ship on Wednesday (Score:2)
Following the push of IE7 on Patch Tuesday, new IE7 exploits will be deployed on Exploit Wednesday. Coming soon to a computer near you.
How to avoid a possible disaster - For Admins (Score:5, Informative)
This is for all the Network Admins for Windows Networks.
If you do not want Automatic Updates to Install IE7 when it is released then just set the following registry key on every workstation:
NOTE: This is highly recommended as everytime I dealt with any Major release from Microsoft things started getting trashed. Microsoft should NOT Automatically deploy this in this way.
For lazy/Proficient Admins here is a Kixtart Script to do this on a list of computers over the network: NoAutoIE7.txt [pcc-services.com]
Why so cagey? (Score:4, Insightful)
Is this Goodbye Non-MS Browsers? (Score:3, Interesting)
Think about it - a message will pop-up saying "Want to upgrade to the new shiny IE? (y/n)"....one restart later, and the next question will be "Want to make it your default browser? (y/n)".....and just like that, poor Firefox/Opera is sat there collecting dust.
It's funny; I have a good friend working in Microsoft. Apparently, Microsoft aren't worried about Windows being pushed to the side, nor Office, nor any of the "paid" stuff....it's IE and WMP that's getting Microsoft hot under the collar right now. I believe it's starting to show.
But it still has serious usability bugs (Score:3, Informative)
The suggested work-around of disabling the anti-phishing filter doesn't work (and isn't acceptable anyway).
LOTS of people are experiencing this problem. I can't believe they're pushing it out with this serious of an issue. I've provided them logs and such, but they only got them last Thursday, so I doubt there's been any fix (hell, I doubt they've even looked at them yet).
It's completely irresponsible to be pushing it out. Looking at the list of outstanding "large" bugs, and knowing the problems I myself have had with it, it's not yet ready for primetime.
Re: (Score:2, Informative)