Death blow to IE possibly?
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I am kind of wondering if this could be the beginning of the end for IE. Not that everyone will stop using it today, but maybe this will break big corporations love affair with IE along with generating momentum in the consumer area to move away from IE.. When you have much of the media telling you not to use IE and switch to another browser for awhile, that seems like it could be a serious blow. I know in the past we have had different threats that would cause people to turn off scripting, but when the security people say to not use it at all, that seems to be a much more serious blow. Does anyone know when Firefox will get a 64-bit version for Windows? :)
Rocky <>< Recent Blog Post: More Fog Today! Thinking about Silverlight? www.SilverlightCity.com
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I am kind of wondering if this could be the beginning of the end for IE. Not that everyone will stop using it today, but maybe this will break big corporations love affair with IE along with generating momentum in the consumer area to move away from IE.. When you have much of the media telling you not to use IE and switch to another browser for awhile, that seems like it could be a serious blow. I know in the past we have had different threats that would cause people to turn off scripting, but when the security people say to not use it at all, that seems to be a much more serious blow. Does anyone know when Firefox will get a 64-bit version for Windows? :)
Rocky <>< Recent Blog Post: More Fog Today! Thinking about Silverlight? www.SilverlightCity.com
well, given than IE has no serious competitors, I'm guessing not.
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I am kind of wondering if this could be the beginning of the end for IE. Not that everyone will stop using it today, but maybe this will break big corporations love affair with IE along with generating momentum in the consumer area to move away from IE.. When you have much of the media telling you not to use IE and switch to another browser for awhile, that seems like it could be a serious blow. I know in the past we have had different threats that would cause people to turn off scripting, but when the security people say to not use it at all, that seems to be a much more serious blow. Does anyone know when Firefox will get a 64-bit version for Windows? :)
Rocky <>< Recent Blog Post: More Fog Today! Thinking about Silverlight? www.SilverlightCity.com
I would say that at most a few percent of internet users keep up with such things, and most of them don't use IE anyway. So I doubt it'll have much of an effect.
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I am kind of wondering if this could be the beginning of the end for IE. Not that everyone will stop using it today, but maybe this will break big corporations love affair with IE along with generating momentum in the consumer area to move away from IE.. When you have much of the media telling you not to use IE and switch to another browser for awhile, that seems like it could be a serious blow. I know in the past we have had different threats that would cause people to turn off scripting, but when the security people say to not use it at all, that seems to be a much more serious blow. Does anyone know when Firefox will get a 64-bit version for Windows? :)
Rocky <>< Recent Blog Post: More Fog Today! Thinking about Silverlight? www.SilverlightCity.com
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well, given than IE has no serious competitors, I'm guessing not.
Right... it's not like Firefox is a threat at all.
// Steve McLenithan
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5!
// Steve McLenithan
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I am kind of wondering if this could be the beginning of the end for IE. Not that everyone will stop using it today, but maybe this will break big corporations love affair with IE along with generating momentum in the consumer area to move away from IE.. When you have much of the media telling you not to use IE and switch to another browser for awhile, that seems like it could be a serious blow. I know in the past we have had different threats that would cause people to turn off scripting, but when the security people say to not use it at all, that seems to be a much more serious blow. Does anyone know when Firefox will get a 64-bit version for Windows? :)
Rocky <>< Recent Blog Post: More Fog Today! Thinking about Silverlight? www.SilverlightCity.com
You mean like the last time this happened, or the time before that, or the time before that, or the time before that, or the time before that......
Today's lesson is brought to you by the word "niggardly". Remember kids, don't attribute to racism what can be explained by Scandinavian language roots. -- Robert Royall
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Right... it's not like Firefox is a threat at all.
// Steve McLenithan
I'm not sure it is a threat to be honest. For the average home user Firefox just doesn't offer any advantages over IE - why download a new program to do exactly the same as something you've already got? I'm a computer professional and I don't see any advantages of Firefox over IE, by and large, and I prefer IE7.
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I am kind of wondering if this could be the beginning of the end for IE. Not that everyone will stop using it today, but maybe this will break big corporations love affair with IE along with generating momentum in the consumer area to move away from IE.. When you have much of the media telling you not to use IE and switch to another browser for awhile, that seems like it could be a serious blow. I know in the past we have had different threats that would cause people to turn off scripting, but when the security people say to not use it at all, that seems to be a much more serious blow. Does anyone know when Firefox will get a 64-bit version for Windows? :)
Rocky <>< Recent Blog Post: More Fog Today! Thinking about Silverlight? www.SilverlightCity.com
Naw. IT here has been deathly quiet, and likely will remain so until a patch is released (or malware brings the intranet to its knees). I suspect the people running bot nets will be the only winners once all is said and done.
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You're right. These facts that you've laid out totally contradict the wild ramblings that I pulled off the back of cornflakes packets.
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I'm not sure it is a threat to be honest. For the average home user Firefox just doesn't offer any advantages over IE - why download a new program to do exactly the same as something you've already got? I'm a computer professional and I don't see any advantages of Firefox over IE, by and large, and I prefer IE7.
Kyudos wrote:
For the average home user Firefox just doesn't offer any advantages over IE
Repaired any computers belonging to "average home users" lately? You'd be surprised the crap that still manages to attach itself, barnacle-like, to IE... Granted, FF is starting to garner some attention as well, but nothing like the sitting duck that IE has been.
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You're right. These facts that you've laid out totally contradict the wild ramblings that I pulled off the back of cornflakes packets.
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I'm not sure it is a threat to be honest. For the average home user Firefox just doesn't offer any advantages over IE - why download a new program to do exactly the same as something you've already got? I'm a computer professional and I don't see any advantages of Firefox over IE, by and large, and I prefer IE7.
The biggest thing for me is the extension system and the fact that I can have the same setup on different operating systems. I make it a point to install Firefox on every computer my relatives/friends show me. It's funny, some of them see the internet in internet explorer and think it is the internet. So in that case I just rename Mozilla Firefox to "Internet" :laugh:
// Steve McLenithan
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I am kind of wondering if this could be the beginning of the end for IE. Not that everyone will stop using it today, but maybe this will break big corporations love affair with IE along with generating momentum in the consumer area to move away from IE.. When you have much of the media telling you not to use IE and switch to another browser for awhile, that seems like it could be a serious blow. I know in the past we have had different threats that would cause people to turn off scripting, but when the security people say to not use it at all, that seems to be a much more serious blow. Does anyone know when Firefox will get a 64-bit version for Windows? :)
Rocky <>< Recent Blog Post: More Fog Today! Thinking about Silverlight? www.SilverlightCity.com
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Kyudos wrote:
For the average home user Firefox just doesn't offer any advantages over IE
Repaired any computers belonging to "average home users" lately? You'd be surprised the crap that still manages to attach itself, barnacle-like, to IE... Granted, FF is starting to garner some attention as well, but nothing like the sitting duck that IE has been.
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You're right. These facts that you've laid out totally contradict the wild ramblings that I pulled off the back of cornflakes packets.
Shog9 wrote:
Repaired any computers belonging to "average home users" lately?
I haven't, but you are making my point exactly. The average home user needs someone who knows more than they do to tell them about Firefox. I'm sure they are quite happy to use it if it is there, but they are unlikely to go and get it for themselves.
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Shog9 wrote:
Repaired any computers belonging to "average home users" lately?
I haven't, but you are making my point exactly. The average home user needs someone who knows more than they do to tell them about Firefox. I'm sure they are quite happy to use it if it is there, but they are unlikely to go and get it for themselves.
Kyudos wrote:
I haven't, but you are making my point exactly.
What is your point, exactly? Rocky commented on "big corporation's love affair with IE" and the general trend away by savvy home users; you appeared to make the argument that FF had nothing to offer the latter. I pointed out that this is hardly the case, as IE presents an easy target for malware distributors, to which you reply
Kyudos wrote:
The average home user needs someone who knows more than they do to tell them about Firefox.
...a task which some of us are more than happy to do, since removing rootkits is not fun. So again, what's your point (other than that you, personally, don't much care to move beyond IE)?
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You're right. These facts that you've laid out totally contradict the wild ramblings that I pulled off the back of cornflakes packets.
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The biggest thing for me is the extension system and the fact that I can have the same setup on different operating systems. I make it a point to install Firefox on every computer my relatives/friends show me. It's funny, some of them see the internet in internet explorer and think it is the internet. So in that case I just rename Mozilla Firefox to "Internet" :laugh:
// Steve McLenithan
Steve McLenithan wrote:
The biggest thing for me is the extension system
A lot of people seem to say that, but I personally have never been impressed with it. People say how great Greasemonkey is (for example), but really who gives a crap? I don't want to re-code the websites I visit...if I did, I wouldn't be visiting them because they'd p*ss me off. I'm not a web developer, so I don't need any webdev addons or anything like that. Guess I'm just a web browser, I prefer the rendering in IE... and I've yet to see an extension I couldn't live without (although I do like the gestures in IEPro when I don't have my home mouse, I can manage without it...)
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Kyudos wrote:
I haven't, but you are making my point exactly.
What is your point, exactly? Rocky commented on "big corporation's love affair with IE" and the general trend away by savvy home users; you appeared to make the argument that FF had nothing to offer the latter. I pointed out that this is hardly the case, as IE presents an easy target for malware distributors, to which you reply
Kyudos wrote:
The average home user needs someone who knows more than they do to tell them about Firefox.
...a task which some of us are more than happy to do, since removing rootkits is not fun. So again, what's your point (other than that you, personally, don't much care to move beyond IE)?
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You're right. These facts that you've laid out totally contradict the wild ramblings that I pulled off the back of cornflakes packets.
My point, I suppose, has also been made by others here, that yet another security issue with IE is not going to persuade vast flocks of home users to switch browsers. They don't know enough - or don't care enough. So hardly IE's death knell as the OP questioned. I wasn't really meaning to start a debate on IE vs FF, just pointing out that one more security flaw probably won't make much difference.
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My point, I suppose, has also been made by others here, that yet another security issue with IE is not going to persuade vast flocks of home users to switch browsers. They don't know enough - or don't care enough. So hardly IE's death knell as the OP questioned. I wasn't really meaning to start a debate on IE vs FF, just pointing out that one more security flaw probably won't make much difference.
Kyudos wrote:
My point, I suppose, has also been made by others here, that yet another security issue with IE is not going to persuade vast flocks of home users to switch browsers.
I don't doubt it - heck, i'm openly skeptical that it will even cause a majority of the (presumably tech-savvy) IT crowd to switch. But it's one thing to say that IE will continue to lead due to apathy and ignorance, and quite another to assert that alternatives have nothing to offer.
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You're right. These facts that you've laid out totally contradict the wild ramblings that I pulled off the back of cornflakes packets.
-
I am kind of wondering if this could be the beginning of the end for IE. Not that everyone will stop using it today, but maybe this will break big corporations love affair with IE along with generating momentum in the consumer area to move away from IE.. When you have much of the media telling you not to use IE and switch to another browser for awhile, that seems like it could be a serious blow. I know in the past we have had different threats that would cause people to turn off scripting, but when the security people say to not use it at all, that seems to be a much more serious blow. Does anyone know when Firefox will get a 64-bit version for Windows? :)
Rocky <>< Recent Blog Post: More Fog Today! Thinking about Silverlight? www.SilverlightCity.com
Rocky Moore wrote:
but maybe this will break big corporations love affair with IE along with generating momentum in the consumer area to move away from IE..
Not likely. This is yet another overblown-in-the-media security problem. I'm quite sure other browsers have just as big security flaws. It's just that nobody pays attention to those browsers because Microsoft didn't write them.
Rocky Moore wrote:
When you have much of the media telling you not to use IE and switch to another browser for awhile, that seems like it could be a serious blow
No, it's not. It's total irresponsibility on the part of the "journalist" by imparting his/her own views on the issue. BTW, the patch for this problem is due out tomorrow. My team already has a bunch of testing scheduled to make sure it doesn't screw up any of our apps before we deploy it. We should have it in production deployment by Thursday night.
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Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP Visual Developer - Visual Basic
2006, 2007, 2008 -
Kyudos wrote:
My point, I suppose, has also been made by others here, that yet another security issue with IE is not going to persuade vast flocks of home users to switch browsers.
I don't doubt it - heck, i'm openly skeptical that it will even cause a majority of the (presumably tech-savvy) IT crowd to switch. But it's one thing to say that IE will continue to lead due to apathy and ignorance, and quite another to assert that alternatives have nothing to offer.
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You're right. These facts that you've laid out totally contradict the wild ramblings that I pulled off the back of cornflakes packets.
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Kyudos wrote:
I haven't, but you are making my point exactly.
What is your point, exactly? Rocky commented on "big corporation's love affair with IE" and the general trend away by savvy home users; you appeared to make the argument that FF had nothing to offer the latter. I pointed out that this is hardly the case, as IE presents an easy target for malware distributors, to which you reply
Kyudos wrote:
The average home user needs someone who knows more than they do to tell them about Firefox.
...a task which some of us are more than happy to do, since removing rootkits is not fun. So again, what's your point (other than that you, personally, don't much care to move beyond IE)?
----
You're right. These facts that you've laid out totally contradict the wild ramblings that I pulled off the back of cornflakes packets.
<blockquote class="FQ"><div class="FQA">Shog9 wrote:</div>since removing rootkits is not fun</blockquote> Tell me about it. I leave my home machine locked from the kids. Couple weeks back I left it open for just a day and got bitten by rootkit. Granted it was somehow got to the machine through the action of the kids, albeit, not fun getting rid of it.:mad: The irony is, I never use IE on my machine, only FF and for some reason the kids only run IE X|
Yusuf