FAQ: Meet Microsoft's New Internet Explorer
Can Microsoft beat back the competition, including Chrome, with IE8?
Wed, September 10, 2008
Computerworld — With all the hubbub surrounding Google Inc.'s rollout of Chrome last week, nearly lost in the buzz was the release the week before of Internet Explorer 8 Beta 2.
Google's stealing the browser show couldn't have made Microsoft happy. Unlike other browser makers, including Opera Software ASA and Mozilla Corp., which at least pretended to welcome Chrome to the race, Microsoft didn't even mention Google or the new browser by name in the statement it issued. "The browser landscape is highly competitive, but people will choose Internet Explorer 8 for the way it puts the services they want right at their fingertips," said Dean Hachamovitch, IE's general manager.
But will they?
A lot's riding on IE8. Microsoft's share of the browser market continues to slip. Last month, it fell by nearly a percentage point, to 72.2%, according to data from Net Applications Inc. A year ago, IE accounted for 79% of all browsers.
Clearly, IE isn't going away. But the newest beta, likely the last before Microsoft declares IE8 ready to ship, will be a crucial test. Naturally, we have questions, and the answers, needed to get you going with this latest browser out of Redmond.
Where do I get IE8 Beta 2? You can download the beta from Microsoft's IE8 page, which sports separate links for Windows XP, Vista, Windows Server 2003 and Windows Server 2008.
IE8 will not be offered for versions of Windows older than XP, nor for non-Microsoft operating systems.
Will Microsoft push it to me via Automatic Updates? Yes, but only if you're running Windows XP or Windows Server 2003, already have IE8 Beta 1 on your machine and have switched on Windows Update's Automatic Updates.
Microsoft has said it will throw the switch for Vista and Windows Server 2008 users as well but has not set a timetable.
What languages are available? Out the gate, IE8 Beta 2 is available in English, German, Japanese and Simplified Chinese.
At some point, Microsoft will post localized versions for Windows XP and Windows Vista -- 32-bit only for both -- in Arabic, traditional Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swedish and Turkish. The company hasn't set a timetable for those editions, however.
What's in it for me? Computerworld reviewer Preston Gralla came to praise, not bury, IE8 when he said, "The beta is still rough in some places, but for anyone interested in seeing the next big browser release, it's stable, useful and well worth the download."


