Internet Explorer 7 beta goes public |
02.07.06 |
Microsoft has unveiled a public beta of its forthcoming Internet Explorer 7 browser, referring to the release as a “preview”.
The beta allows a broad group of developers and users to test the application before its final release later this year. The software is available for download from Microsoft’s website here.
Internet Explorer 7 boasts enhanced security and privacy protection as its main features. Users will be notified if they visit a known phishing website, for instance, and will be able more easily to clear the browser’s history logs and cookies.
The application has copied the tabs feature popularised by the open source Firefox browser, allowing several websites to be open in a single window. It also offers a Quick Tabs feature displaying an overview of all the tabs in a window.
As part of the introduction of Internet Explorer 7 Microsoft will introduce broad support for the RSS syndication technology to Windows.
Rather than every RSS application using its own library with RSS feeds, the technology will introduce a single library that any application can access.
It will also introduce the ability to use RSS for new applications such as publishing calendars or picture slideshows.
Internet Explorer 7 was originally scheduled for release as part of the upcoming Windows Vista operating system. But Microsoft said last year that it would bring the browser release forward, promising availability by the summer of 2006.
A first beta of the application was launched last summer to a select group of testers. The current test version will be freely available to anyone who wishes to download it.
1 comment so far
I downloaded the Internet Explorer 7 public beta this week and installed it on a couple of my Windows XP machines. Here’s the short review: IE7 is a superb piece of software. If Mozilla hadn’t caught Microsoft sitting complacently on its corporate butt, Firefox would never have had a chance against this product. Even so, Firefox still has one advantage, achieved with the help of its high profile and market momentum during the past 15 months, that will keep Internet Explorer stuck on the B-team. It’s an advantage that probably will not drive same market-share gains against IE 7 that Firefox has enjoyed to date, yet it will ensure that Mozilla and Firefox remain significant players, with a meaningful market share and a loyal, tech-savvy, and demographically attractive user base..
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