IE10 on Windows 7 available in November
As we approach general availability of Windows 8, we want to provide an update on IE10 for Windows 7. We will release a preview of IE10 on Windows 7 in mid-November, with final availability to follow as we collect developer and customer feedback.
IE10 on Windows 7 has the same standards based platform for developers to target as IE10 on Windows 8. We built an entirely new browser with Windows 8, with more performance and developer capabilities. IE10 brings improved real-world site performance and additional standards support to Windows 7 that Web developers have been asking for. We look forward to getting your feedback on IE10 on Windows 7, and will provide another update when the preview is available.
—Rob Mauceri, Group Program Manager, Internet Explorer
Comments
Anonymous
October 17, 2012
A preview, really? 100k people and you can't develop anything in time.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 17, 2012
WHAT! i thought IE10 rtm would be out on 26th oct along with windows 8. Not happy microsoft!Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Thank you! I appreciate the update!Anonymous
October 17, 2012
"Standards Based" .. would those be Microsoft standards or internet standards ?Anonymous
October 17, 2012
>2012 >Still waiting for vapourware Win7 IE10 I SURE HOPE YOU GUYS DON'T DO THATAnonymous
October 17, 2012
It's been over a year since the last Preview for Windows 7. It's unfathomable that it's taken so long. It's unfortunate there are still hundreds, if not thousands, of pieces of feedback (including legitimate issues) on Connect that haven't even been addressed. It really goes to show how mixed up the IE development team's priorities are if IE10 RTM's GA won't be next week.. or even next month.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
It is pretty interesting how overwhelmingly negative the community is toward IE still. Not necessarily because it isn't warranted (though I still think it is), but interesting because Microsoft has had so much time to correct these problems and not anger the community. Even if the project is behind, by communicating throughout the process via channels like @IE on Twitter, you can mitigate the disappointment, frustration, and anger.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Is WebSocket supported in Internet Explorer 10 in Windows 7?Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Wait a sec...people still use IE?Anonymous
October 17, 2012
no developers use IE as a default browser, so there's no reason for the developer capabilitiesAnonymous
October 17, 2012
Rob Mauceri, Can you answer me that most of site force me to install Chrome frame or move to Firefox instead of using non-standard browser. Mostly site I use daily like asana and some other hard to run on IE10 and I still got trouble with many site In Ie10 when I tried to test them. Is their any sollution for this. Do you want me to contact every-men's site's webmaster and tell them bugs. anyway, any update on this problem. I tried to post this comment in my past but not sure if I got the answer for this exact problem.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
I'm guessing that the porting from windows 8 was a lot harder than they predicted, probably because IE10 uses some features that are exclusive to windows 8 and those features would have to be recreated in the windows 7 port.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Hey Microsoft, Please stop joking. You made everything buggy, I have tried Bugmatrix but it's crash most of time. I tried Ie10 but most of time it's not work even Chrome frame. I tried Expression studio which even don't have zen-coding and similiar feature that I got freely in Komodo Edit which cost me 0$. so I count 3 maybe someone else few others. When other company can stop the development (adobe) then Why Microsoft not do that.I even not sure if you have any answer for Expression studio web's update.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
I've never once had a site try to force me to use chrome frame and the only compatability problems I ever have are with sites treating IE9 like its IE6. Microsoft can't do anything about the sites you visit having horrible code, tell the web developers to stop being lazy.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
When you navigate inside iframe in IE10, there is no loading indication. When a user click to navigate or submit a form inside the iframe, it has no way to know that the browser is working so it clicks several time which gives a bad user experience and load on the server. In all other browsers you get the normal loading indication like a spinning throbber and loading icon in the cursor. ThanksAnonymous
October 17, 2012
c'mon, how long could it take to re-brand IE9?Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Too Little to late, you really drop the ball on the this MS.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Either release a browser more than once a year, or give up. It's simple as that.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Too Little to late, you really drop the ball on this MS. Excuse me on the dupe post.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Why blame them for Chrome frame not working. If you want to use Chrome, here's an idea, USE Chrome ;)Anonymous
October 17, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 17, 2012
I am enthusiastic and my first was the internet explorer browser and it will last so I will not stop using it in version 10 which should be of note for your version to compete against its competitors will weight!Anonymous
October 17, 2012
I would like IE10 for Windows Vista SP2. I'm a great fan of IE. Thanks.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
End of the world because a browser will be in preview? You make me laugh.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Thank you MS. As a web developer I greatly appreciate all the effort you have put into building a better IE.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
"...with final availability to follow as we collect developer and customer feedback." Seriously? Hello, here's some feedback that has been posted on just about every blog post you guys have had for the last year. Release it. NOW! PERIOD! No more excuses, no more previews, just release the browser.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 17, 2012
When will you guys finally live up to your promises of taking the web/IE seriously? IE continues to be the browser that lags behind every one else.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 17, 2012
I am looking forward to at least the Privacy (Cookie blocked) icon being returned to IE10 status bar on Windows 7 which was removed in IE9.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
What about IE10 on Server 2008 R2?Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Thats not true, in fact if you look at the statistics on most websites you would see that IE6/7 are essentially dead, web developers can completely ignore IE6/7 support unless a client specifically asks for it. Google doesn't even officially support IE7 anymore. And if your clients are too lazy to update IE7, then what makes you think they would update to an entirely different browser? They are staying with an old browser because they don't like change, not because its hard to update to IE8/9.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
IE10 on Win 8 has improved vector drawing (SVG) incredibly. Happy to see that for corporate clients who don not have the luxury of using Chrome or FF...Anonymous
October 17, 2012
I miss IE6 it was awesome !Anonymous
October 17, 2012
For the dummies that dont understand the why corporations dont use Firefox or chrome. It's simple, the later is behind in central manageability features (but at least it has a limited Admx template) and the former completely lacks. Also IE has the best social engineering capabilities.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
I mean anti social engineering.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 17, 2012
I'm still using the IE10 version that came on the Win8 Release Preview, and I'm wondering if anyone else is having these issues, or if these issues have been fixed in the GA build of Win8: On the twitter.com website, IE10 (desktop) release preview has huge usability problems. Hovering over a tweet does not show the "reply/retweet/etc" links. You have to click on teh link to expand it, and then once you click on a link (like reply or retweet) and finish the task, the page will suddenly scroll back up to the top. Additionally, when new tweets appear (at the top, it says "x new tweets/interactions") and you click on that, a gap opens up between the header and the tweets. This gap gets bigger with each update. I've also had issues on Facebook, where clicking on a picture causes the photo viewer to appear BEHIND the main newsfeed, so you can't see the picture. I'm finding using IE10 very, very difficult as a user on Win8 release preview. I sure hope these issues are fixed in the final release bits, or are scheduled to be fixed very soon after release. I'm actually feeling forced to use Chrome on Win8 because IE10's usability is so low.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Chrome is the way to go. Web development tools already incorporated in the browser it is a great thing. But Microsoft will become more and more an IBMAnonymous
October 17, 2012
Put in an auto-updater this time. We're getting tired of supporting your outdated software because your users don't update.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
You guys dropped the ball on IE10, sorry but its clear as day that developers love chrome for the pace of its development, if you want developers to care you need to continue the optimism developers had after IE9.. IE10 needs to be a hiccup, if the next IE isn't hitting customers within 4 months then its not good enough and developers won't care to target IE.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
This is really a joke. The Windows 8 developer dashboard requires IE10, but it is not available on Windows 7. My main developer PC is Windows 7 and will stay on Windows 7, but I can't use MS own dashboard website, because the browser it requires isn't available on Win 7.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
What's Windows?Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Thats for the (long awaited) announcement. Although it appears to come very late, I'm still looking forward to IE10 on Win7. If you could provide more frequent updates on current work being done on IE, and make this blog less of a futile confrontation between Microsoft marketing and angry commenters, and more of a useful, informative and relaxed place, it would be a welcome move. You could start by answering (reasonably civil) comments more often and pressing your management to drop this excessive silence on anything that could cast you in a bad light (slipping schedules, controversial decisions, rival browsers performing better...). Shutting down honest communication in favor of marketing is doing you much more harm than good.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
I meant "Thanks for the announcement.", of course.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 17, 2012
I don't often use Internet Explorer But when I do, I use it to download Chrome.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
It's nice to know that you still remember about Windows 7, but this announcement means that the final version won't be released until 2013. meanwhile I feel sorry for the people that gets a computer with Windows 8 And I can bet without fear of losing my money that it won't be possible to install it alongside IE9Anonymous
October 17, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 17, 2012
FACE PALM PREVIEWAnonymous
October 17, 2012
Thank you for the information. Since I am looking forward to it, please make a good browser.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Please fix the BlurType (TM) Font rendering. How to see it: Install W7. Install IE 10. Set "Best Performance" Done. See the font rendering in IE 9 and up compare to other browser. I still use IE 8 because of this :( I really like to use IE 9 if the font not blur. I don't like antialiasing font. If other browser can render the font using GPU and sharp without antialiasing than IE can be better :) I hope the font rendering in IE 10 will be sharp event in "Best Performance" :)Anonymous
October 17, 2012
In what ridiculous development environment is IE sitting right now? The IE v9+ rendering engine lives in an ever-expanding set of platforms: Windows Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows Phone 7.x, Windows Phone 8 and XBox. Yet there's still no unified development process? Madness.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Please information also gives me the release schedule of the formal version by all means after a Preview version. I am waiting.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
@All, Before you dive into comments and bashing everything posted on IE blog. The so call "preview" would provide equal standards support as IE10 RTM on Windows 8. IE team had to build an entirely new browser for Win8 as the core of OS has changed. For Windows 7, most probably, they will implement spellcheck service, improved credentials manager (with Web Credentials like Windows 8) and other OS dependent stuff. The next to this preview would be the final version (hopefully by December). Also, the development life cycle is changed with IE10. For those who haven't tried IE10 on Win8, there is an auto update for IE versions in About IE dialog. Meanings, IE10 will be upgraded to IE11 and future version without bothering you. Like FF and Chrome does. @Bashers, Are you for real? First you guys were yelling about getInnerHtml support for dropdown, IE10 provided it. Then you asked about advanced CSS3 filters, IE10 provided it too. Then SVG filters, IE10 provided it. Then tons of HTML5 stuff.. Then you asked for IE10 on Windows 7.. now that they have announced the preview and you are still whining! If nothing can satisfy you, then just GTFOH..Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Seriously? IE7 had F12 developer tools when Chrome wasn't even invented. And you are way to obsolete if you think about comparing MSFT (who employee 100,000 professionals from world top universities and whose primary business is to develop and sell products like Windows, Xbox, SharePoint, Surface etc. to make money) and Google (who license opensource projects, tag their Goofy logo on it, install some creepy tracking modules and sell YOU out to make money). Hope you realize now how stupid you were if you still trusted Google with Gmail, Youtube, your gf's Android (everything is FREE) ... but amazingly google is making money on everything by selling your footprints to the highest bidders. Like I was watching a video on youtube and I was seeing the ads about CCIE why? because I recieved the registration email from Cisco on GMAIL! Now they will use the emails in my draft too! Did I signed for that? No way.. So next time you compare epic conspirators with MSFT, just think about it twice..Anonymous
October 17, 2012
that's why I prefer to use Firefox over IE. The site I use daily have totally based on HTML5 so it's better to go with firefox rather then Ie10+GC frame. This is the big trouble for Microsoft with those developer who not want to spent time to make it compatible with IE.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Between the last preview and the next one, Google dished out four versions of Chrome.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Ha! Sounds like what Microsoft does, but I don't think it will help a lot promoting the coming Win8, while you ignore the demand of so many Win7 users.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Is there any plan in MS to release IE10 on Mac OS?Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Preview ? And you wonder why the world is hating on IE and moving to Chrome/FF ...Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Even if you are a beta version, please enable it to certainly coexist with IE of a previous version.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Hi Rob. Preview!? Who still installs unfinished software on their machines? Rather, you should release a VM with your preview pre-configured. Then I'll give it a try. "with final availability to follow as we collect developer and customer feedback." Are you serious? Nearly every blog post this year has had legions of people asking, pleading, and even begging you for IE10 Win7 details. That was our feedback. But you ignored it all. Tell me why this time is any different. Tell me that I will not be wasting my time yet again. No really, please explain it to us.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
This is great news. Even though I was hoping for this a bit sooner. IE10 on Win8 is the best browser ever and I hope IE10 on Win7 will be just as good.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Past previews have been in a special standalone host which made them incredibly difficult to use- will this one be the same? I implore you to release previews as fully usable browsers, it's incredibly difficult to fully vet them when they are artificially limited.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
So when do we get WebGL support?Anonymous
October 17, 2012
bad joke from microsoft....Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Great tool to download Firefox :)Anonymous
October 17, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 17, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 17, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 17, 2012
Awesome! thanks.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
+10 for this one... "Windows 9 - yeah we know, we fired those guys... And we're really sorry about 8"Anonymous
October 17, 2012
to contrast comments so far, believe it or not, I'm a web developer, IE is my default, using Fx w/ Firebug for dev, and a happily win8 user.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
It's good news and right decision! thank you.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
googleappsupdates.blogspot.com/.../supporting-modern-browsers-internet.html Google does the right thing by killing outdated, obsolete browser support.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
Will IE10 be able to run TypeScript natively? I loathe JavaScript. And I don't want to use a TypeScript2JavaScript compiler while I'm programming and iterating on my code. Think about it Microsoft. Your interests are aligned with web developers this time.Anonymous
October 17, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 17, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 17, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 18, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 18, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 18, 2012
This Pokki-thing does "NOT add the Start Menu back" (it just adds yet another "Start menu" alternative). Classic Shell does. classicshell.sourceforge.netAnonymous
October 18, 2012
Yet another fix for the broken Windows 8 RTM install. www.neowin.net/.../new-start8-beta-for-windows-8-released It's called Start8 and it adds the start button back and, fixes search and even lets you boot directly into your Windows desktop. It's unbelievable that so many companies have to come up with a fix for this issue - why on earth Microsoft thought that we'd like to have a lousy desktop experience by default is beyond me but at least real software developers have been proactive and fixed it already. You're seriously driving customers to use a Mac Microsoft... you only have yourself to blame for this fiasco thoughAnonymous
October 18, 2012
This is a complete and utter joke. they have the nerve to release updates to the browser every year or so while other browsers are updated very regular and they don't support extentions, these are the main things people want, you'd get so many more users this way yet these idiots have a brain like a maggot and don't seem to understand this, and then they have the nerve to announce a "preview" in mid-november when the final is already available for Windows 8, Goodbye IE, now im moving me, my family and friends over to chrome just like everyone else slowly is.Anonymous
October 18, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 18, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 18, 2012
Only platform previews have the minimal UI, this is a beta release so it will have the full UI.Anonymous
October 18, 2012
I want an advertising block tool to correspond with the formal version. If it can do, "Adblock Plus" which can use Firefox and Chrome seems to be good.Anonymous
October 18, 2012
Thanks for the update! I'm looking forward to trying the preview!Anonymous
October 18, 2012
Hasta 10 de noviembre la lanzaremos en windows 7Anonymous
October 18, 2012
Next time you realize that there is no chance in he** that you are going to meet your commitments (a win7 beta version of IE10 to provide feedback and report bugs before win8 goes RTM) can you do us a favor?... Yeah can you like come on the IE Blog and tell us that there will be a delay?... It would be a lot better than stonewalling silence and refusing to respond to our questions comments and concerns (esp. The ones raised about security holes!) If we did this to our customers we would lose them and future sales... Don't think just because you're providing a platform/free product that your customers don't have feelings. We certainly do have feelings and the emotion we are experiencing right now is described as "a kick in the teeth!" You've lost a lot of respect in both the developer and user community... And you're going to have to work twice as hard now to earn in back if its not too late already.
- Yet Another Developer abandoning Microsoft for good.
Anonymous
October 18, 2012
Few months ago, sometime before dawn, I told you guys that I emailed a member of IE team and he told me that IE10 will be released on 7 but can't comment on ETAs. Its good to see that it has arrived. At the same time, like many others have indicated here, IE guys have delayed it. @IE-team, please next time release the products previews simultaneously. Hope you realize our frustration and how desperate we are to see the next, yet evolved, version of IE on old PCs: i.e. IE11 :-)Anonymous
October 18, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 18, 2012
IE cannot afford to lose loyal customers as they've already lost the community long back, but they've now lost me a loyal customer, chrome here i come :)Anonymous
October 18, 2012
Is there any strategy in MS to launch IE10 on Mac OS? easycouponcashreview.wikidot.comAnonymous
October 18, 2012
Hi, sorry for daring to submit offtopic comment. But I don't know the appropriate place to request for review. I asked a question about SVG transparency behavior (tavmjong.free.fr/.../svg_test.svg) on Firefox vs Internet Explorer on Stackoverflow community website. It turned out to be a bug in IE10: stackoverflow.com/.../1712065. I am new to SVG. Therefore I cannot elaborate the technical details. But what I understand is that the SVG markers are inheriting the fill-opacity from one of the sibling nodes rather parent. Can anyone with SVG knowledge please confirm and submit a bug-report for it Thank you so much.Anonymous
October 18, 2012
FINALLY. Also, a friendly reminder @MS: all other major browsers work in in all major OSses, which includes Windows, OSX and Linux (except for Safari). Also on Windows, most browsers still support XP and Vista. What about IE10? Is it gonna run on only 2 of the gazillion OSses out there?Anonymous
October 18, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 18, 2012
Wow 7 days till launch and you've got a major PR (Public Relations) disaster on your hands due to 3 months of silence and ignoring reviewers, developers and users! You've got 7 days to convince the world you're not the obnoxious corporation you are currently behaving as... Good luck with that.Anonymous
October 19, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 19, 2012
IE 10 Win 7 = IE 10 Win 8 Desktop, or not? I not really understand why you need feedback for this IE 10 preview. Or we can await improvements in the GUI too?Anonymous
October 19, 2012
why don't you just show us the real results ??? IE10 has the worst support for html5 standards. See the results : caniuse.com . As google says "it's all about results!!!" About the performance just wait 1 month after release and I'm sure that all the other browsers will overtake IE10 in every possible test. And let's not forget that IE10 will get updated/upgraded only after 2 years so it still keeps the crown of the worst thing happened to the internetAnonymous
October 19, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 19, 2012
@pmbAustin: I am using IE10 on Win8 Preview, and it seems to crashe on gmail.com when a file is dragged to be uploaded as attachment. Anyone else too have this problem or is it just me?Anonymous
October 19, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 19, 2012
Will IE10 be available for Vista?Anonymous
October 20, 2012
Why don't you guys stop? Just. Stop. Please stop releasing IE. Stop updating it. Stop doing releases on a 2 year schedule that put you perpetually over a year behind any other browser. Stop talking about IE, stop spending money on it, cut your losses and get out. The damage Microsoft has done after the release & abandonment of IE6 is incalculable. Microsoft has held the web development community behind for nearly a decade. Nobody wants this project. Nobody likes this project. Bundle an auto-downloader with Windows that downloads Chrome, Firefox, or Opera, sanitize your hands and leave. Seriously. Stop. Microsoft spends money on this project and everybody loses. IE no longer innovates; that stopped after IE6. Now this project is nothing but a drag on everyone else. Release a statement saying that you've given up and that you encourage everyone to use another browser. The entire world will thank you - and you won't have to pay engineers to develop IE anymore. Sometimes there is honor in quitting.Anonymous
October 20, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 20, 2012
gp_ : RTM fully patched no longer crashes. Sam: How about you stop posting and remove yourself from net? Nobody likes you. Nobody will miss you. and your trolling idiotic comments. Nobody cares about your hate.And you know what is bad? Forcing others to use your favourite POS... Your chrome bridge awaits your return dear troll.Anonymous
October 20, 2012
#Mike " IE10 has the worst support for html5 standards"... filter on caniuse.com for the last two words of your sentence.Anonymous
October 20, 2012
It is possible to download the Internet Explorer 10 for Windows 7 here: windows.microsoft.com/.../worldwide-languagesAnonymous
October 20, 2012
"We've been burned by Microsoft and the IE Team before but this time takes the cake." Don't worry about it. Just use Firefox and be happy. Mozilla has better browser support for Windows than Microsoft does these days.Anonymous
October 20, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 20, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 20, 2012
@Francisco That page loads, but no files are available. Did you manage to get a copy of it?Anonymous
October 21, 2012
megustaria tener produtoAnonymous
October 21, 2012
Hope that it will be crash less, so i can use it!Anonymous
October 21, 2012
Firefox is a hopeless browser and I just can't wait for IE10.Anonymous
October 21, 2012
Still using IE8 because 9 crash my Windows 7. When I say use I mean I use Google Chrome and have IE8 just in case. Besides which you can't uninstall it anyway, just disable. By disable I mean disable it more than it is already.Anonymous
October 21, 2012
Rob, Your last response doesn't make any sense for those website that force me to move from Ie10. Even I am using IE10 most of site force to me "WE highly recommended to updgrade your browser". BTW do you have anything to change with browser-hacking in future IE I means IE11,12,Anonymous
October 21, 2012
I see the download page for the RP of IE 10 is now live. Do you have an ETA on when the download links are going to work? windows.microsoft.com/.../worldwide-languagesAnonymous
October 22, 2012
Hey ms?do we get full scrgb in ie 10?Anonymous
October 22, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 22, 2012
Please bring back the 'protected mode status display' on the status bar. And bring back the 'privacy cookies status display' on the status bar too'. Also bring back the 'progress bar' on the status bar which shows a webpage loaded status. (It was present in IE4(?)-IE8, but it was removed from IE10). And please add a 'progress bar' to the download manager so the users can see the download completeness graphically. OR at least please make these changes optional / changeable.Anonymous
October 22, 2012
If IE 10 is released on Windows 7 and IE 10 is based on Direct2d effects, does that mean that Direct2D effects will be availabe on Windows 7 as well?Anonymous
October 23, 2012
Great news for those using Win 7! Should have been sooner...but Microsoft's Win 7 support is admirable.Anonymous
October 23, 2012
Really! just give up already, no one wants your browser any way, first thing i did when i finished installing Win8 was to install chromeAnonymous
October 23, 2012
http://opus-codec.org/ en.wikipedia.org/.../Opus_%28audio_format%29 Other browser have Opus codec support(IETF standard), Internet Exploder won't have it for years.Anonymous
October 23, 2012
So anyone placing bets on how long it takes to root a Windows Surphace? I'll give it till Monday since not many tech folks are going to rush out and get this device. It would be really cool to see what we can install on this device instead of the El Camino OS I'm sure we can actually do something cool with the hardware with some tweaking. Since it will likely be rooted very early on it will likely turn off IT departments from deploying (no one wants an insecure device) if of course they aren't scared off due to the plugin security issues that cause double logins across multiple apps in multiple contexts.Anonymous
October 23, 2012
europa.eu/.../press-release_IP-12-1149_en.htm Here comes another billion dollar fine for MS.Anonymous
October 23, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 24, 2012
I can't believe it: in all those blogpost since the IE10PP2, people are ASKING for an Internet Explorer 10 PREVIEW for Windows 7; now they get it, and it's again not good enough. Do you guys know what you want? Anyway, there is, together with Opera and Safari only 1 other browser left with a normal release cyclus, and that's IE. Great job, Microsft. :) Can't waith for IE11.Anonymous
October 24, 2012
Why don't you support Windows Vista??????????? There are only very small technical differences between WinVista and Win7. That's just a very very bad marketing to buy Windows 7 or 8. I can understand why there's no WinXP support, because there are big technical differences between xp and vista/7/8 and xp is a 11 years old OS. But why not support vista????? I'm almost sure that IE11 will not support Windows 7 only windows 8 (and Windows 9 if it will be available that time). At least IE10 will support Windows 7.Anonymous
October 24, 2012
@tbalint444444 - 'Cause Internet Explorer is part of Windows. And Windows Vista doesn't have mainstream support, so no new features and no new Internet Explorer. If IE11 launch before 2015, it will also be available on Windows 7.Anonymous
October 24, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 24, 2012
...I guess we will not have to wait too long, as Microsoft has "donated" some patents (see following list) for this codec. US-2008-0201137-A1 US-2010-0174535-A1 US-2010-0174534-A1 US-2010-0174547-A1 US-2010-0174532-A1 US-2010-0174537-A1 US-2010-0174542-A1 US-2010-0174531-A1 US-2010-0174541-A1 US-2010-0174538-A1 US-2011-0077940-A1Anonymous
October 25, 2012
This is wonderful news. I do enjoy myself some Internet Explorer time.Anonymous
October 26, 2012
Disappointed but not surprised. I thought their rapid development cycle would be quicker than what its been paced at.Anonymous
October 26, 2012
Cuối cùng thì Microsoft cũng đưa IE 10 vào Windows 7 Thật tuyệt vời.Anonymous
October 27, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 28, 2012
MICROSOFT: Please learn from Google. Let IE 10 be the LAST VERSION then do automatic updates like everyone else. No one loves version-targetingAnonymous
October 28, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 28, 2012
I love IE9, then i want to try IE10 but then i found this blog., adblock please,Anonymous
October 28, 2012
Someone @microsoft does not want microsoft IE should compete Chrome, so all the website which was working on IE9.0, all of them are erroring as per the IE 10 on 2012 server. We have IE 10, specially due to security stuff.Anonymous
October 28, 2012
Another IE version in preview means nothing more than a new playground for hackers, malware writers and viruses. And those who cannot wait till the RTM is out can get ready to be infected...Anonymous
October 29, 2012
What a great news this is. Hope it will improve our browser environment .Anonymous
October 30, 2012
The comment has been removedAnonymous
October 30, 2012
I do not know if other browser vendors will create such a browser, but the documentation of how to do it is here: go.microsoft.com/.../p