With the public release of its second beta, Microsoft said it intends for the Internet Explorer 8 browser to be more customer-oriented than previous versions of its browser. Our initial impression of Internet Explorer 8 Beta 2 is positive: we think Microsoft has not only caught up with Opera, Safari, and Firefox, but in some cases even surpasses these other browsers with its innovative new features. IE8 offers people several enhancements like colour-coded tabs, increased privacy options, and greater security features baked right in. Most of the new features require systems to be running Windows Vista SP1 or Windows XP SP3. The final version of Internet Explorer 8 is expected in November 2008.
The user interface hasn't changed much since Internet Explorer 8 Beta 1, except to add a Security pull-down menu between Page and Tools on the main toolbar. In addition to blocking phishing sites, IE8 now highlights the main domain of any website you visit. Thus, if something other than eBay.com is highlighted, chances are you are on the wrong website. Perhaps the most anticipated addition is Internet Explorer's new anti-malware protection. Opera 9.5 and Firefox 3 both recently added anti-malware protection. Safari has so far not announced plans for similar protection. Using mostly its own anti-malware technology, Microsoft will block emerging threats by masking the entire IE8 browser screen with a warning to users. The addition of malware protection to the existing anti-phishing protection will be re-branded as the Microsoft SmartScreen filter.
In another feature, known as InPrivate, Microsoft allows the browser to suspend caching functions while you surf. Some scenarios for using InPrivate might be when you're using someone else's computer, when you need to buy a gift for a loved one without ruining the surprise, or when you're at an Internet kiosk and don't want the next person to know which website you visited. While you can currently clear the browser cache with a mouse click, it's an all-or-nothing action. InPrivate temporarily suspends the automatic caching functions, allowing you to keep the rest of your browsing history intact.
IE8 also contains a cross-site scripting filter, one of the first in a mainstream browser. Cross-site scripting allows an attacker to execute script on a user's browser without them knowing. When the IE8 filter finds a Web page with a cross-site scripting request, it changes the content on the page with a notice. Users are not presented with an option; IE simply blocks the malicious script from executing and displays the rest of the page.
IE8 Beta 1 has already introduced several changes when handling ActiveX components. Components will be installed per user, which eliminates the need for everyone to have administrator privileges. In addition, you must acknowledge or opt-in for the component to run, eliminating drive-by downloads. Components will be per site and will only be available from the site of origin. Finally, site developers can request killbits, code that identifies a particular ActiveX control, from Microsoft which can be sent via Windows Update to terminate risky or outdated components. Killbits look for a specific identifier; if the identifier is missing or marked bad, an application will not run within Internet Explorer until the developer issues an updated version of the application.
Getting back to the customer experience, there's an underlying assumption by Microsoft that everyone wants new tabs. For instance, opening a bookmark means automatically opening a new tab. To re-open a closed tab, you need first to open a blank tab; same if you want to restore a previous session within IE8.
Fortunately, IE8 has included a new colour-coded tab system that interrelates tabs. If you are on one page and click a link to open another tab, the two will appear side by side and share a colour. This may work for casual users, but for a power user who needs 10 to 15 tabs open with tools and sites frequently visited, the proliferation of new tabs becomes unwieldy — whether or not they are grouped and associated by colour.
IE8 provides what Microsoft calls an "accelerator". Here's how it works: highlight any word or phrase on a Web page and the browser will prompt you with a blue arrow icon. Now, use that icon to associate that word or phrase with a Web 2.0 service, such as Google maps to conveniently find an address. You can customise the options. Your accelerated item will appear in a new tab that is colour-coded and adjacent to the original reference tab.
All this is good news for loyal Internet Explorer fans, but loyal Firefox fans still retain the customisation edge — for every new feature in IE8, there will undoubtedly be another Firefox extension produced soon enough. If anything, IE8 will serve notice to the other browsers that the sleepy giant has awakened. The browser wars have reignited.
Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!





ismaelg5
29/09/2008, 04:42 PM
rating
5/10
it wont let me display mcaffe security center just shows a blank page
Pros: look good
Cons: like i said in the comments
Report offensive comment
Vectoor
30/08/2008, 08:41 AM
rating
7/10
I like it, a huge improvement from v7. Still no match for firefox though...
Pros: Looks better, the accelerators and the slices are great innovations. The auto crash thingy is nice too. I wish M$ would show this side more often.
Cons: Feels a bit slower than ff3, and I can't get cooliris to work :(
Report offensive comment
5Babies
29/08/2008, 03:49 PM
rating
7/10
Donloaded this today, while new pages & tabs open up alot faster, it frustrates me in other aspects.
Pros: Faster page downloading, toolbar is alot easier to navigate. Apart from one Con, everything else seems to be going well.
Cons: Keeps saying add-ons disabled, yet i go into the settings & it says all my add-ons are enabled??? Hopefully I can figure this out.
Report offensive comment
fdiaz83
29/08/2008, 02:14 AM
rating
8/10
It USED to not display Google Maps properly in Beta 2. It does now. Performs alot better on AJAX pages
Pros: * Handles AJAX pages better than Beta 1
* Color coded tabs
* Actually works with Microsoft Update site (Beta 1 didn't)
*
Cons: * Doesn't work with LogMeIn
Report offensive comment
presario
01/05/2008, 03:50 AM
rating
6/10
doesn't display maps.google.com in IE 7 emulation mode, however emulation mode works wonderful.
Pros: almost identical to IE 7, thus easy to use; highlights the domain name in the address bar, adds functionality to the net.
Cons: doesnt display some pages correctly,
still in beta.
Report offensive comment
bchau
10/03/2008, 11:13 AM
rating
9/10
Installation went well. So far so good. CSS support is very good indeed. Passed the ACID2 test.
Pros: Great CSS support.
Cons: None so far.
Report offensive comment
chris manuel
08/03/2008, 03:48 PM
rating
6/10
I'm running it now and havnt had any problems so far. just working out the new feautes
Pros: None Yet
Cons: None Known of
Report offensive comment