A series of highly publicized security vulnerabilities found in Microsoft Corp.’s Internet Explorer Web browser may be having an effect on the browser’s market share, according to data compiled by ...
Microsoft stopped supporting the Internet Explorer web browser on Wednesday, indicating the end is near for a 26-year-old brand with baggage that includes an antitrust case, security flaws and lagging ...
If your desktop, laptop or mobile device is still running Internet Explorer, you should know that last month, Microsoft officially decided to end what was once its most popular browser. This means ...
Microsoft is retiring its Internet Explorer web browser after more than 25 years. The app is replaced by Microsoft Edge, which offers more speed and security, and a built-in "IE mode." As of June next ...
Microsoft's next-generation Internet Explorer 9 browser may not be anywhere close to competition, but you can test drive a "platform preview" of the software that provides a taste of IE9's ...
The era of Internet Explorer is officially ending. On Tuesday, Microsoft confirmed that the company permanently disabled the out-of-support Internet Explorer 11 desktop app on certain versions of ...
We review the history of one of the most iconic browsers on the Internet. Discover everything Opera has done for browsing, regardless of whether you use it or not ...
For several months, Microsoft had been losing ground in the browser category. According to Web metrics firm Net Applications, Internet Explorer’s usage share numbers had been falling steadily ...
Today, Internet Explorer might be the most well-known discontinued web browser, but the path to modern web giants like Chrome, Firefox, and Safari is filled with a rich history of innovation driven by ...
Microsoft Corp. may be talking up the performance boost it gave to the just-launched Internet Explorer 8 (IE8), but the new browser remains the slowest of the top five on the market, benchmark tests ...
Ask the average techie which browser has the most vulnerabilities, and odds are their answer will be “Internet Explorer, of course.” Indeed, Microsoft’s browser has endured plenty of slings and arrows ...