In 2015, Microsoft introduced Edge, a homegrown browser it pitched as a modernized successor to Internet Explorer, and capable competitor to Google Chrome. Just three years later, Microsoft has raised ...
Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. is a senior editor and author of Notepad, who has been covering all things Microsoft, PC, and tech for over 20 ...
Microsoft may have finally devised a way to get people to stop using Internet Explorer once and for all (via ZDNet). When the company releases the next version of its Edge browser, currently slated to ...
Microsoft has finally said it, and it is pushing Internet Explorer to extinction in 2022 as it would end its support in favor of the native Windows 10 browser with Microsoft Edge. The world was ...
Microsoft Edge is adding a new Internet Explorer mode in time for the retirement of the iconic browser of Windows. The Internet Explorer mode on Windows 10 will be available on the Chromium-based web ...
The era of Internet Explorer is officially ending. On Tuesday, Microsoft confirmed that the company permanently disabled the out-of-support Internet Explorer 11 desktop app on certain versions of ...
In brief: Microsoft announced that it would stop supporting Internet Explorer next year. It's not a big surprise. The Edge browser is far superior and has received much more development attention in ...
Ditch Internet Explorer: How to Make the Switch to Microsoft Edge It's almost the end of the line for Internet Explorer. If you want to stick with Microsoft, here's how to move your favorites, ...
Internet Explorer is going into retirement this summer, and lest anyone may have forgotten or didn't take Microsoft seriously, the Redmond outfit is sending out a new wave of notices to Windows 10 ...
People have been surfing the Web with Internet Explorer for a quarter of a century. Microsoft is ready for Windows users to leave it behind once and for all and embrace the much more modern Edge.
May 20 (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O), opens new tab is pulling the plug on its once omnipresent browser, Internet Explorer, next year as it prepares to battle market leader Chrome with its ...