On MovieTome: Pixar's new film has characters from Up
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Paul Festa
Posted on ZDNet News: Mar 16, 2005 9:43:00 PM

After a years-long drumbeat of developer complaints, Microsoft may finally be budging on its support for standards and on key missing features in its Internet Explorer browser.

Microsoft last month broke with a longstanding pledge and said it would release a new version of IE before its next major Windows upgrade. Security concerns catalyzed the shift in plans, and Microsoft has kept mum about any possible standards or feature upgrades that might accompany the security improvements.

But a source familiar with Microsoft's plans confirmed a Tuesday report on MicrosoftWatch that IE developers, who have code-named their project Rincon, are at work on non-security features and standards support, including tabbed browsing, support for IDN (Internationalized Domain Names), improved support for CSS 2 (Cascading Style Sheets) and PNG (Portable Network Graphics) transparencies.

MicrosoftWatch also reported that IE 7 will include a built-in news aggregator based on RSS, or Really Simple Syndication.

While Microsoft declined to answer any questions about IE 7, the company has repeatedly brought up the issue of IE 7 standards support on its developer-oriented blogs to solicit suggestions on what changes developers would like to see in the upcoming release of the browser. Without making any promises, leaders in the IE development team suggest that after years of inaction on World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) standards problems, Microsoft will finally clean up its act.

"Specific requests and descriptions of problems in the field help us tremendously in prioritizing what we need to do," Chris Wilson, Microsoft's lead program manager for the Web platform in IE, wrote in a March 9 blog titled "IE and Standards." "Microsoft does respond to customer demand; Web developers are our customers."

If the tenor of the comments posted in response to Wilson's blog item is any indication, Microsoft has a lot of angry customers.

"IE6 has stagnated since its release," wrote one of Wilson's more civil respondents. "More annoying than this stagnation has been the silence from Redmond regarding future releases and the support of standards. Aging documentation, no support forum, undocumented features--IE 6 has been a nightmare."

Developers' concerns about standards and feature support in the current version of IE are reflected in the browser team's current to-do list. Frequent complaints include IE's lack of tabbed browsing, which lets users keep multiple pages open within the same window; full support for CSS 2, a W3C recommendation that lets Web authors apply single style guides to multiple pages; and support for PNG transparencies, which provide a nonproprietary, unpatented way to create transparent images.

The Mozilla Foundation--whose highly successful Firefox browser many credit with lighting a fire under Microsoft's IE development work--hailed news of Microsoft's renewed attention to standards and features, but dismissed the idea that a souped-up IE could steal Firefox's fire.

"Let's remember that the reason for IE 7 is security," said Chris Hofmann, Mozilla's director of engineering. "That's what's driving people away from IE and focusing them on other browser solutions like Firefox. There's some tough work for Microsoft to do because content developers have come to rely on features that are insecure."

Hofmann specifically cited Microsoft's proprietary ActiveX API (application programming interface) for running Web-based programs on client computers; Microsoft's implementation of the DOM (Document Object Model), which lets scripts act on discrete elements of a Web page; and IE's security zone model.

"It's not about the features," Hofmann said. "But if they're going to do this major upgrade, they're not going to leave the feature set three years behind the other browsers."

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 42 Talkback(s)
This thing is going to follow Standards?
Now I will have to rewrite everything. I used to try to follow
standards, but the only browser I test with was IE, and it seemed to
work no matter how bad I write my code.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: tor2351@... Posted on: 12/23/05 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Microsoft needs to have IE only web sites though.  DonnieBoy | 03/16/05
I'll only migrate to Linux when...  voska | 03/16/05
But don't you get tired of Microsoft with their hand out?, the viruses?  DonnieBoy | 03/16/05
What?  NonZealot | 03/16/05
Most people pay for MS software, yes, fixes are free (if MS chooses to fix)  DonnieBoy | 03/16/05
Not a nice try  NonZealot | 03/16/05
Please do ignore Linux  Sunny Jalolly | 03/16/05
Ok, so you don't use AV, you never apply security patches??  DonnieBoy | 03/17/05
Again with the reading comprehension!  NonZealot | 03/17/05
Ok, we can all relax, MS does not and will not have security problems.  DonnieBoy | 03/17/05
What he said  voska | 03/17/05
Then they've already failed  John L. Ries | 03/16/05
Competitive markets  Real World | 03/17/05
MS doesn't make any money from IE  John L. Ries | 03/17/05
Yes, but it is very important for them to maintain 90% or more share.  DonnieBoy | 03/17/05
How much lock-in value does IE have?  John L. Ries | 03/17/05
Sure they do  Real World | 03/17/05
And the reduced numbers of IE only sites is why they are willing to  DonnieBoy | 03/17/05
What's a browser?  Anton Philidor | 03/17/05
I don't understand IE only sites  alterego_z | 03/17/05
Yes, but it was not that long ago, that it was less than 5%.  DonnieBoy | 03/17/05
Blatantly "innovating" Firefox's featureset into IE was inevitable  whisperycat | 03/17/05
Did you read your link?  Ardian Daka | 03/17/05
Yawn. Another lame argument  billywill | 03/17/05
Be nice to jellyclock  NonZealot | 03/17/05
You should..  Jeff Spicoli | 03/17/05
Look Who's Talking ... Now !  Ardian Daka | 03/17/05
I'm talking, Mo Frare!  Jeff Spicoli | 03/17/05
Wish they'd call it W3C cohort pressure...  Anton Philidor | 03/17/05
Would you prefer they cede to standards like ISO and ECMA?  B.O.F.H. | 03/17/05
Promise we won't argue about punctuation?  Anton Philidor | 03/17/05
But Anty..  Jeff Spicoli | 03/17/05
So, no FireFox "advantage" in features.  Anton Philidor | 03/17/05
Spicoli Lied  nucrash | 03/17/05
Needing to put words in peoples' mouths a sure sign of..  Jeff Spicoli | 03/17/05
Featuring...  Anton Philidor | 03/17/05
Some users just like old technolgy!  B.O.F.H. | 03/17/05
Tabbed Broswing?  jfreedle2@... | 03/17/05
Darn, source close to MS, . . guess that means lawsuit  FilledOut | 03/18/05
This thing is going to follow Standards?  tor2351@... | 12/23/05
This thing is going to follow Standards?  tor2351@... | 12/23/05
This thing is going to follow Standards?  tor2351@... | 12/23/05

What do you think?

advertisement
Premier Vendor Content Whitepapers, webcasts & resources from our Power Center Sponsors
advertisement

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads