Microsoft Ends IE on the Mac 289
ron_ivi writes "Microsoft is
to cease IE support for Apple's Mac on Dec 31st of this year." And with this change, every mac on the internet will become even more secure than their Windows based counterparts.
CT Deja Vu 'eh? Sorry.
from the-dupe-dept. (Score:3, Insightful)
from the who-needs-ie-anyway dept.
RandomMacUser writes "A while ago, Microsoft stopped updating IE for Mac, freezing it at version 5. But according to this Microsoft webpage, all support will cease December 31, 2005, and any official distribution with cease January 31, 2006. Also, the webpage suggests 'that Macintosh users migrate to more recent web browsing technologies such as Apple's Safari.'"
http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/12/18
Re:from the-dupe-dept. (Score:2)
Re:from the-dupe-dept. (Score:3, Funny)
Should be:
from the yeah-umm-sorrry-about-that-my-bad dept.
Oh wait, that would be a dupe dept [slashdot.org]
I TOLD THEM IT WAS A DUPE!!!! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:It makes you think. (Score:2)
Re:It makes you think. (Score:2)
Probably not so many. My last story got rejected, but it was just the latest ThinkSecret rumor about Yonah-based notebooks and minis. To be honest, there aren't that many real Apple stories these days. That should change as we get closer to MacWorld Expo. They might be able to use a real story on the G4- and G5-optimized builds of Firefox, but other than that...I'm not thinking of much.
Re:It makes you think. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:from the-dupe-dept. (Score:5, Informative)
They don't think that. It's just that since it is a dupe, the actual content has already been extensively commented on elsewhere, leaving nothing but its status as a dupe to talk about. If you want to read about MS discontinuing IE for the Mac, go back to the original article on the subject. The de facto topic under discussion in duped articles always reverts to "dupes and the lazy, unprofessional /. editors who post them".
Re:from the-dupe-dept. (Score:3, Funny)
Also, when they first saw the story, maybe there were *no* posts?
Lets face it, it takes a few seconds to hit "reply to this", write your "Hey dummy, its a dupe!" and hit submit - especially since the server is probably responding to 50 people doing it all at once - its getting slashduped.
Besides, what did you expect - its Troll Tuesday and the editors want to play too.
Re:from the-dupe-dept. (Score:2)
Amusingly, Slashdot's serving a lot of ads because of those dupe stories. Not doing much to discourgae this little behaviour that really really bunches our panties.
Dupespotting (Score:2)
Obviously you have not yet read the rules of the Slashdot Dupespotting Association, aka the SBA.
To qualify, you must post DUPE in all caps within 15 minutes of the article
appearing (front page only).
First place gets 3 points, second place gets 2 points, third gets 1.
So, you see, even if someone has already posted DUPE, it beehoves you to still
try to qualify as second or third. At the end of the year, all of your points are added
up by a leet
Re:Give 'em a break (Score:5, Informative)
This is not analogous to what Microsoft has done with Internet Explorer. Windows Explorer uses the MSHTML DLL to browse the file system, and Microsoft's HTML integration with the file browser runs so deeply that security flaws which would normally only be minor browser irritants become flaws which can execute arbitrary code in the file browser's memory space. Witness the security travesty that is ActiveX. A browser technology laden with security flaws suddenly becomes an operating system-level problem because of ActiveDesktop.
Apple does not use WebKit for the Finder, and the Finder is far less tied into the underlying OS than Windows Explorer is. The Finder has some special features over other applications, but at the end of the day, it's just another application which can be quit if you don't like it without really losing much. In Windows, it's a different story. For example, it's impossible to manipulate the Control Panel without Windows Explorer because that interface is guarded by private APIs. Mac OS X uses a separate application to change system settings.
Re:Give 'em a break (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Give 'em a break (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Give 'em a break (Score:2)
Re:Give 'em a break (Score:2)
Sigh (Score:5, Funny)
So I see a big blank page, thanky adblock plus, hit the continue to free day pass link, and what I see? Bright red dupe. Oh wait, but this time with trolling in the janitor's comments!
Hotness. So this is what being a Slashdot subscriber is all about? I'm sold.
Re:Sigh (Score:5, Funny)
Would you like that article in English? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you'd like a better article regarding this, try out this article which is easier [cbronline.com] and it also contains a relevant quote: Instead of having to put up with awkward sentences like the following from The People's Daily article:
I hope everyone has "applied" firefox by now.
I'm not going to say anything about this remark: Other than this is an arguable statement. It's possible that whatever browser has the highest usage rating will have the most virii written for it. If Firefox becomes the dominant browser, it might even be safer to have IE installed on your computer to avoid the latest virus. Yes, a Firefox virus is fixed faster than an IE virus, but it's still a liability.
Re:Would you like that article in English? (Score:5, Insightful)
Utter nonsense.
In the context of the article this is doubly nonsense because IE for Mac is discontinued and vulnerabilities for it will never be fixed.
In a wider context, its still nonsense. If you're concerned about security, you use the browser with the more secure architecture - not the one with the least users.
Re:Would you like that article in English? (Score:2)
Ok, so you're right. There, that's not something you see on a slashdot post very often, is it?
I guess our argument comes down to whether an architecture really is safe. Maybe IE's architecture is just
Re:Would you like that article in English? (Score:3, Interesting)
Ok, so you're right. There, that's not something you see on a slashdot post very often, is it?
Nope
I guess our argument comes down to whether an architecture really is safe. Maybe IE's architecture is just unsafe because the current lines of attack are developed to target its architecture?
No, I think IE's architecture is unsafe therefore lines of attack were developed to target it...
Embedded into the O/S and activeX are a good starting point for things for MS to fix.
As a pr
Re:Would you like that article in English? (Score:2)
Re:Would you like that article in English? (Score:2)
Anything is possible. But when it comes to Microsoft, we actually know: Microsoft has plenty of products that are not dominant, and they contain lots of security vulnerabilities, too. The problem is with the way Microsoft creates software, not that Microsoft software is popular.
As for Firefox, it is not invulnerable; many of its defects, however, are the result of closely imitating Microsoft and ta
Re:Would you like that article in English? (Score:2)
And why on earth is People's Daily being used as the canonical source of a story entirely based in the US? It's not a leak, it's announced on Microsoft's site [microsoft.com] for all to see.
Re:Would you like that article in English? (Score:2)
Not secure... (Score:5, Insightful)
Not if they keep using old unsupported software..
Nothing will force them to change from IE. Arguably this makes them even less secure.
Re:Not secure... (Score:3, Interesting)
How does an insecure application (which I don't doubt IE is ), with no hooks in to the kernel space (unlike IE on windows), make mac insecure ?
For argument sake, if IE/Safari/Opera/Firefox all have same # of vulnerabilities in their mac versions. Will they not be equally secure or insecure ?
This is obviously a strong contrast against IE on windows v/s Opera/Firefox on Windows, as IE seems to work a lot in OS or kernel space.
Re:Not secure... (Score:2)
Re:Not secure... (Score:2)
Having not used windows for a while now, I really am not sure what the status of IE "built-into-windows" is.
Re:Not secure... (Score:3, Insightful)
IE is built in to the OS in the sense that it comes with Windows, and is impossible to remove.
First of all, the 'trident' rendering engine is used by many third party programs, so removing it would break them in the same way that removing a commonly used library would. That is fair enough.
The problem we all have with IE is the fact that you can't remove the front end, ie
Re:Not secure... (Score:2)
Thanks for clearing some of the doubts.
Re:Not secure... (Score:2)
Hmmmmn, somehow, I doubt that someone using a version of IE on a Mac past the end of 2006 is the sort of person who'd be applying security updates in any case.
I agree with the general gist of your post however - that it's better for software to continue to recie
Re:Not secure... (Score:2)
One example you might not be aware of are intranet applications. We have an inventory order system that REQUIRES IE because of the VB scripting. Not my idea. It will run on any box that uses IE, but the app wont work at all without IE. We don't have a choice but to use IE, patches or no, and our systems are patched very regularly.
The author is alm
Re:Not secure... (Score:2)
What security problems does IE for the Mac have?
Cancelled TWICE? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Cancelled TWICE? (Score:5, Funny)
I sense a disturbance in the Force (Score:2)
Whoopty f'ing doo (Score:2, Flamebait)
This just in... (Score:5, Funny)
Microsoft no longer to support IE for Apple [slashdot.org]
In a related story, Apple IE users will no longer be supported [slashdot.org].
And in business news, Microsoft announced it will discontinue support for IE on the Apple platform [slashdot.org].
Thank you and good night.
Re:This just in... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This just in... (Score:2)
Well, I don't know, but I heard on irc last night that they aren't going to make it - they're dropping Apple support completely! I've been thinking maybe I should submit an article about it to /.?
Re:This just in... (Score:2)
Re:This just in... (Score:2)
re-subitt the same story a thousand times! (Score:2)
Re:This just in... (Score:2)
I don't remember anyone claiming that Slashdot is supposed to be a school of journalism, a beacon of journalistic integrity, or an arbiter of what's newsworthy. People contribute story ideas; some get published, some don't. It's the Internet; the volume of information is staggering. To expect perfection is to have your sights set t
Re:This just in... (Score:2)
The amount of information the editors post comes to about two pages of text a day, all told, including all the categories that don't hit the front page. And that's betweem at least two and up to four editors. There is no excuse for not spellchecking, or duping a story from 24 hours ago. Several years ago they actually researched stories, now they seem to just randomly queue up a bunch of submissions and go off to do something more important.
I use
dupes aside (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: site support for non-IE browsers (Score:2)
> because sites need to start supporting web browsers in general if they want to keep their mac users instead of assuming that mac users will want to install IE.
Yep, and we're not talking insignificant sites. My credit card company (one of the Big Three) site has important functionality that doesn't work except under IE (...according to their tech support and my attempt to use Safari.)
One assumes MS considered the cost of keeping IE/Mac barely alive was worth more than the risk of forcing such sites
Re: site support for non-IE browsers (Score:2)
Discover, American Express, MasterCard, Visa?
Or did you mean someone like MBNA or Chase?
I've been happily using non MS browsers for sites such as those for a number of years now.
Re: site support for non-IE browsers (Score:2)
Re:dupes aside (Score:2)
The more different (but standards compliant) browsers out there, the better the experience for all of us.
Justin.
Re:dupes aside (Score:2)
I'm not even sure if its Windows counterpart knows how to behave.
Re:dupes aside (Score:2)
Back in 1999 it was a very good browser (Score:5, Informative)
Everyone please remember that IE/Mac is a very different browser than IE/Win, and back in 1999/2000 it was one of the most standards-compliant [tantek.com] browsers around.
According to The Web Standards Project [webstandards.org] it helped to start the "CSS layout revolution". [webstandards.org]
Re:Back in 1999 it was a very good browser (Score:2)
Now it's just another front end to WebKit, but back then it was its own rendering engine, having a legacy from the NeXT days.
Brain-dead comment (Score:3, Insightful)
Remove this brain dead inflamatory comment, and there's nothing really left of this story. I hope the person submitting it is proud of themselves. Especially considering this is a dupe of a previous front page story.
Furthermore, this comment is just plain wrong. When Microsoft stops support for IE on the Mac, are they going to remove it from all the Macs that already have it? No of course not, so the security situation will not change immediately. I hope Microsoft will continue to supply security patches, otherwise there is a danger that every Mac on the internet with IE will become less secure over time as exploits are found.
Out of curiousity, just how insecure has IE on the Mac been?
Re:Brain-dead comment (Score:5, Insightful)
Unless thats what they want to happen.
Would it be so bad for MS if the public perception of os x as more secure than windows was damaged a little?
Re:Brain-dead comment (Score:2)
Remove this brain dead inflamatory comment, and there's nothing really left of this story.
Very true. I was going to comment on that and the usual dupe, but both were caught by others (-1 Redundant for me).
However, the "brain dead inflammatory comment" was probably added by an "editor". I decipher the story topics as the following (reading slashcode would confirm that, but I rarely read arti
Re:Brain-dead comment (Score:2)
Re:Brain-dead comment (Score:2)
I've never run a successful or unsuccessful business, but I would almost agree that consumer are often pleased by the most surprising and insignificant things.
Surprising just means unexpected, nice, and often a sign of attention to detail. I'm pleasantly surprised with my car's design feature of a gas cap holder inside of the locking gas cap cover. My car is not a BMW, but they had
Re:Brain-dead comment (Score:2)
Yes, I am dumb and often don't proofread my posts and look dumb taking about dumb. I know better, but do worse...
Re:Brain-dead comment (Score:2)
Out of curiousity, just how insecure has IE on the Mac been?
The only one I ever heard of was MS02-019, which was fixed in 2002.
How secure? (Score:2)
Out of curiousity, just how insecure has IE on the Mac been?
About as insecure as any other normal browser, and maybe a quintillion times as secure as IE on Windows.
suggestion (Score:5, Insightful)
I sent an email to tell it's a dupe 20 minutes before the story appeared to everyone.
I was hoping it mattered.
I am disappointed.
Since during the last duped story someone suggested a way to avoid dupes, let me add my idea:
During the time the story is not yet fully released:
Allow subscribers to post.
Automatically give 5 moderation points to all subscribers and allow moderation.
Editors, please check the subscribers posts before releasing the story to everyone.
If all is ok, remove the subscribers posts and release story.
Re:suggestion (Score:3, Funny)
let me add my idea
Here's an even easier idea that the editors can try out, patent-free:
Re:suggestion (Score:5, Funny)
Meanwhile, CmdrTaco continues playing WoW...
Two corrections here... (Score:3, Funny)
Secondly (and more important): IE for the Mac was an entirely different product, with a different codebase and a different rendering engine. While IE for Mac did have an occasional vulnerability (typically patched pretty quickly), it was at the time a more standards-compliant browser than its distant Windows cousin.
Unlike IE for Windows, IE for Mac was simply an application. No low-level stuff, no rendering engine used by the system (like IE Win and, for that matter, Safari/WebKit for the Mac), no ActiveX compatibility, no nothing. Other than the lack of pop-up blocking (which wasn't a common feature in any browser yet), IE was a pretty decent product. Most Mac users used IE, and were pretty happy with it - it had versions for the old Mac OS, and a spiffy Carbonized version for OS X). When Apple announced Safari, though, the writing was on the wall for IE Mac - why keep building a browser that earns no revenue and doesn't even help draw users to other Microsoft products? Just to get a few more MSN pageviews by people too lazy to change their default homepage?
Nah.
Same freaking article title, much worse snarking (Score:5, Informative)
Sheesh, the very latest article [slashdot.org] for Jebus' sake!
And Office? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:And Office? (Score:2, Informative)
Uninstalling Mac IE (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Uninstalling Mac IE (Score:5, Informative)
I haven't and wouldn't want to try to remove safari to see if Apple allows it so easily.
I'll save you the trouble: yes. You'll still have the WebKit framework, since that's an integral part of several other bundled apps and a whole bunch of 3rd-party apps, but Safari itself is trivial to remove.
Re:Uninstalling Mac IE (Score:2)
"Uninstalling" safari is just as simple. drag to trash, empty. done.
Unlike IE on windows, safari is a stand-alone user-level application that is not used for anything besides web browsing, so removing it does not cripple anything.
Who cares at this point? (Score:2)
IE for the Mac has been very dead for a very long time.
Dupe? How about Tripe? (Score:2)
Anyway, how about we try for three and a bunch of us submit this story AGAIN!
Two negatives make a positive, correct? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Two negatives make a positive, correct? (Score:2)
Are you foreign? Sorry, but I just read the title, re-read it, and couldn't help but think it sounded like the stuff of a Babelfish translation, maybe translating something like "Two wrongs make a right, right?" from, say, Korean into English.
iqu
Not again! (Score:5, Funny)
my IE on Mac support ended (Score:2, Funny)
Sad (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Sad (Score:2)
IE 5 no tabs. Forget IE. IE 6 no tabs. Forget IE (Score:2)
So tabbed browsing is in beta, eleven years since the technology was introduced. I wonder if they will lead users to believe it is one of their innovations?
People still use IE? (Score:2)
CT Deja Vu 'eh? Sorry. (Score:2)
He's Canadian?
IE on Windows (Score:2, Funny)
Deja vu? (Score:2)
The horse is dead already. Please stop beating the poor thing!
Change in Slash Editor Policy (Score:2)
In related news, Slashdot announced today a change in editorial policy. Starting in December, each Slashdot editor will approve a different version of the same story.
Asked about the decision, CmdrTaco pointed to tension amongst the editors. "ScuttleMonkey was whining about only having a chance to approve **Beatles-Beatles linkwhore articles, while Zonk and others get to approve stuff that matters (sometimes more than once, even). This change in policy will hopefully get rid of this tension, which has di
Dialog at 7:30 in the morning (Score:5, Funny)
Slashdot Admin: 'What?'
Jules: 'Do I look like I'm stupid?'
Slashdot Admin: 'What?'
Jules: 'Do I look like like someone who needs to be told everything twice?'
Slashdot Admin: 'What?'
Jules: 'Don't you understand what I'm saying? What country are you from?'
Slashdot Admin: 'W...? What?'
Jules: ' "What"? "What" ain't no country I ever heard of. Do they speak english in "What"? '
Slashdot Admin: 'What?'
Jules: ' Say "What" again. SAY "WHAT" AGAIN! I DARE YOU, MOTHERF*CKER, I DOUBLE DARE YOU. '
Vincet: 'How do you read our submitions and the articles posted?'
Slashdot Admin: 'W... w... we
Jules: 'So you think we're stupid?'
Slashdot Admin: 'What?'
*BLAM!* *BLAM!* *BLAM!* *BLAM!* *BLAM!* *BLAM!* *BLAM!*
In other news... (Score:2)
**Requires Internet Explorer for Mac.
no big loss (Score:3, Informative)
It ain't like many Mac users were running IE. Heck there's plenty of browsers available for the Mac.
Safari
Firefox
Mozilla
Opera
iCab
Omniweb
to name a few.
Dear Taco, (Score:2)
uhhhhhh... (Score:2)
Re:Saw this before... (Score:2)
Re:*Sigh* (Score:2)
-b
Re:*Sigh* (Score:2)
(I've been modded down for stupid things today, I might as well troll and deserve it...)
Re:I'm outta here... (Score:2)
Re:I'm outta here... (Score:2)
Re:So much for Mac (Score:3, Informative)
I'm pissed off about it, and I have opened SAP OSS notes regarding it
I do wish there was a way to get firefox to be more 'crapatible
Re:So much for Mac (Score:4, Insightful)