Microsoft Internet Explorer marks its 15th anniversary this week. The first version of the browser was launched back in the summer of 1995 and since then the browser–now in its eighth rendition–has ...
The day has finally arrived: Microsoft has killed off Internet Explorer. Or has it? The answer to that is: well, sort of. Microsoft has said for years that it plans to replace the venerable Internet ...
Microsoft will be disabling IE and directing Windows users to its modern Edge web browser in coming months. The news inspired jokes, memes and even some fond memories. By Michael Levenson It was Aug.
Microsoft announced some heartbreaking news for Internet Explorer users on Valentine's Day: Internet Explorer is no more. The company has permanently disabled the desktop version of Internet Explorer ...
It’s official. Microsoft is ending support of its 26-year-old web browser, Internet Explorer, on June 15. Microsoft first made the announcement over a year ago and has been encouraging users to retire ...
After years of decline and a final wind-down over the past 13 months, on Wednesday Microsoft confirmed the retirement of Internet Explorer, the company’s long-lived and increasingly notorious web ...
is a senior editor and author of Notepad, who has been covering all things Microsoft, PC, and tech for over 20 years. Internet Explorer is dead. Microsoft is retiring IE today after nearly 27 years.
After long years of palliative care, Internet Explorer has reached the end its life, Microsoft says. The much-reviled 26-year-old web browser once dominated the internet, but never shook its ...
Microsoft is working on the HTTP/2 protocol in Internet Explorer. Work supporting HTTP/2 began when they added the SPDY 3.0 protocol to both Internet Explorer for Windows and Windows Phone 8.1, and if ...
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