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Microsoft releases newest version of Web browser

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Microsoft Corp Vice President of Internet Explorer Dean Hachamovitch unveils Microsoft Internet Explorer 9 Beta version during a demonstration in San Francisco, California September 15, 2010. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith

Microsoft Corp Vice President of Internet Explorer Dean Hachamovitch unveils Microsoft Internet Explorer 9 Beta version during a demonstration in San Francisco, California September 15, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Robert Galbraith

SAN FRANCISCO | Wed Sep 15, 2010 9:37pm EDT

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp released the latest version of its Web browser, saying that it would work at faster speeds, deliver better graphics and be less obtrusive to users.

Internet Explorer 9, unlike previous versions and many competing browsers, pushes itself into the background.

"People go to the Web for site, not the browser," said Dean Hachamovitch, general manager for IE, at a press event in San Francisco. "Today Web sites are boxed in, the box is the browser."

IE9 is available in a public beta, or trial version, in more than 30 languages. Many of the world's most popular sites including Facebook, Amazon.com, Time Warner Inc's CNN, eBay and Twitter are taking advantage of IE9's new features.

The browser has become one of the most important programs on a PC. As people watch more video and use sites such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, browser makers are making their latest versions quicker and better at handling graphics.

Microsoft is promising a faster, cleaner, more secure version of its browser, one that will support evolving Web technologies, such HTML5, a standard for presenting content.

It is also more tightly integrated with the company's Bing search engine, which the company hopes will begin to eat away at the dominance of Google.

In IE9, the rendering of graphics and text has shifted to the graphics card from the CPU, accelerating speed and visuals. As a result, Microsoft said sites will look and perform more like applications that are installed directly on a PC.

IE9's tight integration with Microsoft's Windows operating system, which runs on most of the world's PCs, enables IE9 to use a computer's hardware in a way that rival browsers cannot, said Forrester Research analyst Peter O'Neill.

"This is going to make the Windows platform more attractive, and Microsoft hopes, help stop people from leaking away to other browsers," he said.

IE has been the market leader for many years, but has been losing share to Mozilla's Firefox and Google's Chrome.

IE had 51 percent of the worldwide browser market last month, according to StatCounter, compared to Firefox's 31 percent and Chrome's 11 percent. Apple Inc's Safari and Opera Software's browser had about 4 percent and 2 percent.

(Reporting by Gabriel Madway. Editing by Robert MacMillan)

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Comments (4)
goibhniu wrote:
It’s a “beta” so I find the heading a bit misleading. This isn’t a “release” it’s just for people who want to work as beta-testers for Microsoft (without getting paid) or for web developers who need to fix their sites so that they will work when the new version actually gets released.
Sorry to be harsh but this looks more like a press release from Microsoft than journalism. All the features mentioned are already available in the currently released versions of the competing browsers.

Sep 16, 2010 7:16am EDT  --  Report as abuse
johnpro2 wrote:
@goibhniu Sorry to be harsh but this looks more like a press release from Microsoft than journalism.

Correct ..company/govt media advisors now outnumber journalists 4 to 1 apparently.
I will try the IE browser all the same.The price is right so it hard to say no.

Jp

Sep 16, 2010 6:02pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
TheDeuceman wrote:
“All the features mentioned are already available in the currently released versions of the competing browsers.”

That sounds like the Microsoft marketing plan-always bringing up the rear as it pertains to “New and Improved” and pawning it off as New and Improved. What a bunch of jerks over there in Redmond.

Darrow…for the Prosecution

Sep 16, 2010 6:50pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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