Some stars shine too bright and fade too soon.
https://www.theverge.com/2022/6/15/23167121/microsoft-internet-explorer-end-of-support-retirement
Some stars shine too bright and fade too soon.
https://www.theverge.com/2022/6/15/23167121/microsoft-internet-explorer-end-of-support-retirement
Which was worse, IE itself, or the fact that many organizations did not allow their computers to run anything else besides it?
![]()
A text without a context is a pretext.
At my last job (which happened to be my first job, and was not web or tech related), I finally got fed up with IE and decided to install Firefox after losing hours and hours dealing with websites that just didn't work with IE (sites I needed to use on a daily basis). My assumption was that it would say I didn't have admin privileges and I wouldn't be able to install.
Instead, I install successfully, feeling pretty satisfied with myself, until about a half second after the install finished when I get two or three "you have installed unauthorized software, please delete immediately" popups from the security/monitoring software. About a second later my phone starts ringing from the head of IT. Pure panic.
Ultimately I continued using IE. They eventually installed Firefox on everyone's computer about a year later I think. Oops.
W3C, IETF RFC's, CA/B Forum... these are just meaningless acronyms not meant to be taken seriously, right?
In all fairness, I do like/respect what MS has done with Windows 10, with the move from IE to Edge, and some of the other tools they've freely come out with, notably VSCode, WSL2, and Microsoft Terminal.
A text without a context is a pretext.
Anybody else remember Prodigy? I barely remember it because we rarely used it because there was nothing to use it on.
Internet Explorer gravestone goes viral in South Korea
2O2WVAXQQFK6DN5CTSOIT6RJXE.jpg
So many flashbacks to the dread I felt going to an internet cafe in a foreign country and seeing IE as the only option.
The only correct way to acknowledge this would be to post about it in about 12 weeks.
As a mildly interesting side story, i worked in networking (when it meant how to connect to a mainframe) when this whole internet thing started. I’ll never forget the joy of typing in the name of a Japanese website and watch it load over the course of a few minutes. I was connected!
I think this was pre-IE. probably Mozilla.
I miss the comforting sound of dial-up.