IE actually still has utility. There are many websites, from government service to corporate finance, that have their security authentication written specifically for IE. She may be gone from the public consciousness, but IE still has work for quite some time.
IE actually still has utility. There are many websites, from government service to corporate finance, that have their security authentication written specifically for IE. She may be gone from the public consciousness, but IE still has work for quite some time.
Yep I have seen it; executed on virtual machines still using windows 2000, along with in-house software the company wrote using something like FoxPro like 20 years ago, and they are too cheap to update. She will live stuck in that past forever, during her golden age, when she was popular, loved and the most advanced browser of her time.
Actually used Edge for quite some time, but experienced some weird issues (just blocks all connections for a few minutes after launching the .exe) that made me switch to Chrome.
German customs, however, seem to be designed exclusively for use with IE. Also, Getchu's DRM seems to be very heavily focused on IE, so there's still plenty of use for it.
IE has lots of useage in corporate environments, a lot of their utilities are written for IE, and for the longest time, I was built to work easier with web-based applications than most 3rd party browsers.
I work in an MSP, and some of our clients use web-based programs from big companies, and I always tell them to use Internet Explorer. People use Chrome, and the sites say to use chrome, and will you look at that it doesn't work. Fire up old reliable IE and ayy lmao no more problems.
Also
bbiowa said:
Microsoft Edge (Internet Explorer?) isn't terrible at all.
Edge and IE are completely different programs, they have different engines and Edge was built entirely new from the ground up