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IE 7: so much for Firefox
By Molly Wood, senior editor, CNET.com
Tuesday, February 15, 2005
Molly Wood Editor's Note: This version has been edited to clarify that Internet Explorer 7 is not a true standalone browser release.

The party's over.

In the past year, the little browser that could, Firefox, became the people's hero, an underdog warrior that took a huge swipe at its enemy, Internet Explorer. IE dipped below 90 percent market share for the first time in years, while Firefox lured users like the Pied Piper, blowing past its own fundraising goals and reigniting the browser wars.

Meanwhile, the bad news continued to mount for Microsoft. An IE exploit put even Windows XP SP2 users at risk from phishing schemes, even as Microsoft touted SP2 as the most secure version of Windows yet. Worse, major security companies and the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team began to recommend that computer users dump IE for something more secure (read: Firefox).

By early this year, Netscape was emboldened to reenter the fray, announcing in January that it would release a new version of the Netscape browser, designed specifically to resist phishing schemes--something even Firefox lacks. Then, Opera said it would offer free licenses to universities, in order to make sure it would still be relevant in the new world browser order. And through it all, what was the response from Microsoft? Silence.

Are you afraid of a standalone Internet Explorer, or will you keep betting on the Firefox pony?
For a moment there, it looked like the tyrant IE could actually be overthrown. Those were heady days, weren't they? Well, they're over now. Papa Bill just dropped the hammer. Bill Gates announced this week, at the RSA Security Conference in San Francisco (of all places), that Microsoft will release an updated version of IE, Internet Explorer 7, without waiting for the next version of Windows. Gates says the unexpected release is designed to address the perception that IE itself is a massive security risk. What he didn't say, but you know he was thinking it, is that IE 7 will easily put a stop to this upstart browser rebellion.

Don't believe me? You should. Firefox is great, I use it. But it's a chore sometimes, what with most sites using that pesky nonstandard IE code. Not everything renders properly, and some sites just plain don't work--I have to load up IE to use them. Plus, let's be honest--Firefox has its flaws. Why is there no way to check for updates from within the browser, for one thing? Why does it take so doggone long to launch? Why, why must it crash every single time I open a PDF? I mean, every single time. Opera, fine, whatever, I'm not paying for a browser, and for some reason, although I've tried it several times, it's just never captured me. It's too clunky, and I was raised on IE. I don't want to learn something completely new. IE, on the other hand, is like the sweeping tide--it's just easier not to fight it.

If IE 7 is even 50 percent more secure than current versions, the Firefox rebellion is finished. If IE 7 has tabs, Firefox will be destroyed as surely as the Hungarian uprising of 1956 was crushed by the Soviets. I use the analogy deliberately, too--no one expected Microsoft to issue a major update to IE before Longhorn came out, but those months of silence (and, no doubt, frantic development) look awfully ominous now.

It was bad when Microsoft seemed to ignore Firefox, treating it like a harmless upstart not worthy of comment or attack. But now that the sleeping giant has awakened, I think the buzzing gnat of the browser wars is about to be squashed flat. What do you think?

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1009 messages

Article discussion: IE 7: so much for Firefox


Latest post:

"Molly's comment about Internet Explorer 7"
by Caveman613 (See profile) - February 15, 2007 12:42 PM PST
I have used several web browsers during my Internet career or life, including Opera, Netscape, what became Firefox, and a couple of browsers that never had a name. But, and the tru... (Read more).
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| Most helpful

way to go!

all of you whining about this article... did you happen to notice it was written... (Read more)
by katypatt (See profile) - February 9, 2007 5:39 AM PST

Honestly...

Do you work for Microsoft? This data is inaccurate, therefore the article should... (Read more)
by yycdestroyer (See profile) - January 7, 2007 4:11 AM PST

Vote On Which Browser You Will Use!

Are you planning on using IE7 or Firefox 2 in 2006 - 2007?

Cast your vote... (Read more)
by westrajc (See profile) - October 27, 2006 6:37 AM PDT

oh, how wrong you are...

Internet Explorer 7. I'm using it right now. It's not bad. But, I don't reall... (Read more)
by Fenwick67 (See profile) - September 28, 2006 8:25 PM PDT

So many mistakes, so little time...

I am absolutely astonished at how many inaccuracies are in this article. Let's ... (Read more)
by Zmidponk (See profile) - September 25, 2006 7:00 AM PDT
15 out of 15 users found this comment helpful

Crashing Firefox is quite a feat.

I don't know what you did to your computer or when the last time you updated was... (Read more)
by Protoc0l (See profile) - September 21, 2006 5:28 PM PDT

So much for BS

Molly or whoever you are... one is slave to their own words. You literally owne... (Read more)
by gyzmopr2 (See profile) - September 12, 2006 6:01 AM PDT

Updating in firefox.

There is a "check for updates" tap in the help menu. (Read more)
by Sturts (See profile) - August 15, 2006 7:19 AM PDT

If you like Firefox...

And you want to have IE codes... try IETab for Firefox. (Read more)
by RoboticUAV (See profile) - June 8, 2006 9:08 AM PDT
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