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Explore the best of Internet Explorer 8 Beta 2

Explore the best of Internet Explorer 8 Beta 2

By:  Shane Schick  On: 11 Sep 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Forget Chrome for a minute: Beta 2 of Microsoft's Web browser has a lot of consumer-friendly features, but that doesn’t mean you can’t take advantage of them. Ideas for developers

When Pete LePage was still a teenager growing up in Mississauga, Ont., he and his friends used to love driving down to the Harbord Bakery in downtown Toronto. After seven years working with Microsoft in Seattle, however, you can’t blame him if he needs a little help finding his way down there again.

“That’s when something like this really becomes useful,” says LePage, a product manager with the software giant’s Internet Explorer division, pointing to a screen that offers a sneak preview of version 8’s second beta edition. He’s using a search box that gives suggestions on what he might be looking for based on his chosen content providers (in LePage’s case, of course, this is Live Search rather than Google).

Once the bakery’s Web page comes up, LePage hovers over the address and highlights it. A blue glyph comes up, which offers him a series of options that he can take advantage of with a click of a button. This includes getting a map that could instantly help him get to his chosen spot. “We would see it all the time in our usability test labs: More often than not, people would highlight a piece of text, put it in another tab, and so on. They would be at five or six clicks to get what they wanted.”

IE8 aims to do what a browser should – ease navigation for harried users. It also includes a number of features designed specifically for enterprise IT departments. Beta 2, for example, offers group policy enhancements designed to simplify desktop deployments of the browser, as does a beefed-up administrator kit. Slipstream installation will allow admins to deploy IE8 as part of an OS image, and application compatibility tools will bring management of policy settings to a more granular level.

But most of what LePage showed off in an interview with ComputerWorld Canada were the kind of eye-catching features that would most interest consumers. These included add-ons with names such as Accelerators and Web slices. LePage thinks they should interest corporate customers, too.

“I can tell you from working at Microsoft that in an organization of that size you’re trying to find things all the time,” he says. “The Accelerators, the Web slices – these are all tools you can absolutely use to your advantage as an organization.”

Matt Rosoff, an analyst with independent analyst firm Directions On Microsoft, says it may take some doing to get IT professionals to see IE as anything more than an entranceway to Web-based business processes.

“A lot of organizations when they have Web apps, they write them for a particular browser. Is it strategic? Not per se,” he says. “The Web application is strategic and the programming language you’re using on the server is. I think the browser is a means to an end.” Part of the problem may be that companies take their Web browsers for granted, says Sheri McLeish, an analyst with Forrester Research. This is despite the innovations from Mozilla’s Firefox or even Google’s recently-announced Chrome browser.


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Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada. Follow him at Twitter.com/shaneschick, Facebook.com/Shane.Schick.Media or myi.tw/ShaneSchickGoogle.

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