In fairness, Microsoft didn't make that statement, security advisors did.
There is a security flaw in IE that they can't fix, so they say use something else. That's pretty funny.
Q "Why do you like Duke, you didn't even go there." A "Because my art school didn't have a basketball team."
In fairness, Microsoft didn't make that statement, security advisors did.
Speaking to the BBC website, John Curran, head of Windows at Microsoft UK, said: “It would not be advisable to send people from one vulnerability to multiple vulnerabilities.”
--He's addressing the idea of going to a different version of IE than 7. Meaning don't use any of them.
Q "Why do you like Duke, you didn't even go there." A "Because my art school didn't have a basketball team."
It certainly could be or it could be "creative journalism". I tend to lean toward the latter.
The question asked of the Microsoft rep could have been "Would you suggest your users switch to other browsers?"
Note that the title of the article was originally "Microsoft encourages users to switch to other browsers" has since been changed to "IE users encouraged to switch to other browsers".
I've been saying the same thing for years.
There's pretty much no difference between the two, in terms of memory overhead and resource utilization on your machine. Agree, though, that it's a fine and fairly unobtrusive solution if you need it.
But the real question is, are there really still sites that require IE in 2008? For shame.
I think the original concern was security, though I agree that in general a web browser is a web browser. For my money, I like the ability to add extensions to ignore cookies, disallow pictures, etc.
But, there are plenty of sites where the page doesn't render correctly making them hard to navigate. And as others have mentioned Microsoft Update requires IE.
I just think that's super sad. Those providers are telling more than 1 in 5 people they don't value their patronage. It's not terribly difficult to make your site work across multiple browsers. Some super cool companies even provide easy, cheap, no-install-required tools for testing content in multiple browsers.![]()
Have anyone switched full time to Chrome? While there are some extensions I'd miss by switching completely over, I've seen faster load times and a general nimbleness to Chrome that has been lost in Firefox.
Patch is available now. If you are a Windows user, update ASAP.