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Auto Install of IE 7 Delayed In Japan
Posted by
Zonk
on Sat Nov 04, 2006 06:40 PM
from the for-reasons dept.
from the for-reasons dept.
filenavigator writes "Microsoft has delayed the automatic install of IE 7 in Japan. There's an an interesting response in one of the MSDN blogs. IT pros are saying that they have done this because business users asked it to be delayed. It seems to me many business users here in North America wanted it to be delayed as well, but were forced to scramble and deploy IE 7 blocking software. This looks like more proof that the IE 7 automatic push was more for marketing reasons, than security. If it were a security issue, than why wait on the Japanese push?" Does anyone know the 'technical' reason that the autoinstall was delayed?
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Different countries has different situations (Score:4, Interesting)
It is very possible that Microsoft wants IE7 to be installed for security reasons, and that there are no reasons that are important enough to outweigh that in the U.S. But lets say for example, that the language support in IE7 is broken for Japanese in some weird and newly discovered way, and that a large portion of Japanese web sites don't function properly.
So, see? While the security situation is the same in all countries, other issues may not.
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The "security reason" is Microsoft's financial security. Firefox is showing people that IE is one more piece of the Microsoft software stack they can do without.
Once they discover openoffice, most of them won't need Windows except as a gaming box - and the Wii looks more interesting to a lot of people.
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Just to satisfy my curiosity, I read some of the posts at the linked to blogs.msdn.com, and you have people like this koolaidaholic to contend with:
(http://blogs.msdn.com/ie/archive/2006/11/02/first -wave-of-localized-ie7-releases-now-available.aspx )
"re: First Wave of Localized IE7 Releases Now Available
Thursday, November 02, 2006 3:20 PM by Omar A.Perez
I feel bad I have been such a pest you guys. I really do prefer IE7 to FireFox after using it for the last few da
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It's also not always Microsoft's fault. I work in the NHS an in Primary Care (GP surgeries amongst others), many places are under strict orders to block the upgrade because clinical software has been written in such a way that it works only with IE6. And there is also the issue that vital software hasn't passed conformence testing with the new version, yet.
It's pretty piss poor that the third party software is so non-standards compliant that this is the case, but, and I say this as someone without a Win
I call Shenanigans (Score:2)
If that were true, wouldn't they make it available for some of the other flavors of Windows besides XP?
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Automatic installation of a different browser? (Score:2)
Re:Automatic installation of a different browser? (Score:4, Funny)
Parent
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I hate to be a jerk at this point... (Score:2)
But that's the past. Will the people who got so burned by this learn their lesson and make their sites cross browser compatible? Or will they repeat the same mistake except with IE7?
Something to think about, anyway.
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Microsoft probably did this just to fuck with your friend's mind. She is a most powerful Admin, after all.
SCENE: Your friend and Microsoft are standing in Microsoft's office. Your friend has her light saber drawn in an offensive stance while Microsoft stands rather tensly in front of your friend. Microsoft's fear is carefully hidden. Its back is to your friend.
WF_ADMIN: I won't be a pawn in your political game. Wells Fargo is my family.
MICROSOFT: Only through me ca
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One of the main goals of making "Web apps" is to free yourself from proprietary APIs and environments. If you make an IE only app then you might as well have just made a Win32 app. With Firefox in the mix your web "app" can run on Windows, Linux, Mac, Solaris, BeOS, OS/2, and more!
I hope for the sake of all that is good that these IE only sites that are ha
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> from...
"Even though"? You write that as if you are suprised.
There's a bazillion reasons why IE7 is pushed (Score:2)
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I don't see the point. I don't do web development, but I have heard the new IE is just about as bad as the old IE when it comes to standards compliance. It's just bad in different ways. So won't web developers have to throw away tons of information on IE6 incompatibility, just to figure it out all over again for IE7? Sounds like a lot of wasted time.
If security is really the issue, shouldn't they remove IE altogether?
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Why don't people just use this as an opportunity to switch to Firefox or Opera? If a whole bunch of sites are already breaking with IE7, why not just go all the way for full standards compliance? Don't most people make sites that work in Firefox/Opera and validate, then hack them for IE?
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The peanut gallery in their spare times do. A -couple- of significant companies. Go on any mainstream web site, and right click and look at the source. Its about 50/50, give or take. Last I checked, Google didn't even have a freagin doctype.
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The claim seems to be that IE7 is being delayed for issues of compatibility. Okay, that may be reasonable. Your argument is that the benefits trump the loss of compatibility everywhere, other than in
No I don't! (Score:5, Funny)
Answer: No I don't!
Disclaimer: I do not know what I am talking about.
This didn't happen overnight! (Score:4, Informative)
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We got the message Thursday from two of our application providers;
"IE7 will not work, please wait for fix from us!"
Things like this use quite a bit of time to go thru the system.
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It's not a coincidence.. (Score:4, Insightful)
At my friend's company, there was a corporate wide memo stating that no one was to install IE7 except the "new media" departments, because they do all the website work and need to be able to test how IE7 slaughters their HTML and CSS. Even the new media departments were told to install "At your own risk".
I don't think it's too far fetched to believe that the Japanese market caught word of how IE7 is breaking all sorts of other software and asked Microsoft not to push it. I think the response in the IE blog is bullshit. The Japanese don't want IE7. Not if it's going to break everything.
Aero
Re:It's not a coincidence.. (Score:5, Insightful)
A lot of the software that are breaking which are not related to web, however, do so because of their use of the MSHTML rendering engine... In a -lot- of cases, just changing the doctype tend to make things -relatively- OK. For the rest...well, IE7 has been in beta and RC for how long now? I know that IT stuff doesn't happen overnight, but Microsoft gave as much warning as they possibly could. If stuff broke (and I'm guilty of that, some web apps I wrote did break, and I didn't take time to test it in IE7), its the developer's own damn fault. They had like a year or something. Jesus...
Parent
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At my friend's company, there was a corporate wide memo stating that no one was to install IE7 except the "new media" departments, because they do all the website work and need to be able to test how IE7 slaughters their HTML and CSS.
IE6 has horrible CSS support. IE7 has pretty decent CSS support. If someone's coded their site so it doesn't work with a browser that implements CSS in a standard way, then they're idiots for doing that, and they've already got problems with any customer-facing stuff, becaus
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We've had a couple of things "break" in our office, and had the webmaster go through the old code. I stopped counting the times I heard him tell people on the telephone "well, yes, it shouldn't have worked in the first place."
Microsoft got themselves into this hole, and now they are realising that
Who backs business in the US (Score:2)
Are You Kidding Me (Score:3, Insightful)
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But IE6 won't be killed. It's going to be around as long as people are using Windows 2000, at least.
I have no point of view about automatic updates and Microsoft vs. Firefox, except, I really suspect that the Mozilla/Firefox api is far more orthogonal to customers' systems and applications than IE. If I'm wrong, I'm wrong, if I'm not, it's because Microsoft chose for it to be that way and therefore does have more responsibility for thinking twice before pushing something down the line.
As for the Microsoft
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Compare Apple's update cycle to Microsoft's, prior to their "we're done with Windows!" release of XP. You had Windows 95B, Windows 98,
2 cents from the online media camp (Score:2)
The fact of the matter is, when IE7 came out here in the US (still haven't seen an AUTO INSTALL on WinXP SP2 on my home machine?!), the newspaper company I work for scrambled to fix all of its sites to handle some odd CSS issues in IE7 that had been resolved in IE6. Web-based admin tools that our newspapers use, as well as the newspaper websites themselves, had to be examined from front to back to make sure that
digging a grave ? (Score:2)
Look, IE7 is largely incompatible with IE6. So lots of websites will have to be redesigned now. If they have to be reworked anyways, you can do it with proper HTML and CSS support, getting rid of the proprietary IE crap. Which means Firefox, Opera, etc. will work just as well.
This is NOT an auto-install (Score:2)
The "critical" Windows update is simply an installer shim which first prompts the user [msdn.com] and asks if they want to install IE 7. They can say yes, no, or not now (remind me later.)
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I wonder if this was just Slash-hysteria all along, or if MS changed their minds about how to handle the updates. I guess if I'd bothered to read the articles when this story first came out I might know.
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Like many other Microsoft-related stories, the Slashdot crowd tends to prefer making up their own facts and ignoring reality if that reality happens to show Microsoft in a less than satanic light.
The great part of IE7 (Score:2)
seriously (Score:2)
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Errrm. There is nothing preventing them from getting IE7. It just won't be automatic. Any Japanese person can download IE 7 right now.
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Microsoft made available tools to control the deployment of IE7 (of course, up to a certain date, then you will be forced AFAIR), which should have been used by the server admins in businesses (schools count as a business here) where such a change could negatively affect productivity.
Good sysadmins test and test and test. Also, as you mention, the users are used to the old software; the new software is very dif