Internet Explorer 9 final to go live March 15
updated 12:30 pm EST, Wed March 9, 2011
Internet Explorer 9 finished, due March 15
Microsoft said Wednesday that Internet Explorer 9 was finished. The new web browser will be ready to download at midnight Eastern time, March 15. It follows just a month after the release candidate and a year after the very earliest tech previews.
The browser is significant both for Microsoft and for the industry. It represents the company's first browser to sincerely honor web standards instead of focusing on proprietary code and, even in early tests, was competing in accuracy with rival browsers. Past versions have had many instances of proprietary rendering that either didn't render standards properly or forced web developers to include exceptions to account for IE users.
Microsoft has reversed its approach significantly enough that it's now encouraging users to stop using IE6 to get customers towards more standards-compliant versions of the software, particularly IE9.
The browser also represents a major opportunity for Microsoft to freeze declines in market share. Despite a demographics revision that temporarily improved IE's market share, the browser has been sliding for the past few years as Firefox, Safari and eventually Chrome began adding many more features and better web rendering speed. IE9 has a much more competitive JavaScript engine with graphics-based hardware acceleration, HTML5 support and other improvements to catch up.
The IE9 engine should eventually reach Windows Phone 7 through the Mango update due late this year.







Fresh-Faced Recruit
Joined: Apr 1999
Bah
And still no CSS gradients and other random niceties. Too little, too late, Microsoft. Maybe IE 10 will be worth something in another three years.