Microsoft is finally retiring Internet Explorer 11 from some Windows 10 versions and replacing it with the Chromium-based Microsoft Edge. "Microsoft Edge has Internet Explorer mode (“IE mode”) built ...
New browser Project Spartan will be the star of Windows 10. — -- The Internet Explorer brand is dead as we know it. The ubiquitous browser, which made its debut two decades ago, has been ...
Internet Explorer is set to have its final end-of-life update on June 15. The Windows 10 update will be sent out to PCs after that date, disabling the browser and wiping it from devices. While ...
Microsoft is pulling the plug on its Internet Explorer web browser for beginning June 15, 2022. "We are announcing that the future of Internet Explorer on Windows 10 is in Microsoft Edge," Microsoft ...
Soon, MHTML files will open in Microsoft Edge's Internet Explorer mode. The change will affect when people try to open certain files from Outlook when Internet Explorer is set as a default handler.
TL;DR: Microsoft is permanently scrubbing Internet Explorer from Windows 10 and the disinfection starts today. As highlighted in Microsoft's Internet Explorer 11 desktop app retirement FAQ, IE11 will ...
After 27 years as Microsoft's Windows web browser, Internet Explorer (IE) is no longer supported. But that doesn't mean the legacy Windows browser isn't still in use, and despite years of warning it ...
Happy Valentine’s Day — Internet Explorer is now dead. After announcing it would phase out the legacy browser last year, Microsoft announced that it permanently disabled Internet Explorer 11 on ...
If you are trying to use Internet Explorer Mode in Edge on your Windows 11 or Windows 10 PC, you may discover that IE mode is missing, and you will see the message Internet Explorer can’t be found ...
It might finally be time to bid farewell to Internet Explorer. On Wednesday, Microsoft announced it plans to retire the web browser for certain versions of Windows 10 on June 15, 2022. After that time ...
The day has finally arrived: Microsoft has killed off Internet Explorer. Or has it? The answer to that is: well, sort of. Microsoft has said for years that it plans to replace the venerable Internet ...