Google is retiring Frame, a browser plugin for Internet Explorer (IE) that run Chrome's rendering engine on sites or web apps that Microsoft's browser didn't support. Bring your own device to work?
Google has released a significant update to its controversial Chrome Frame, an Internet Explorer plug-in that replaces the default IE rendering engine with the engine that powers Google's Chrome ...
The beta of IE 9 is more than just a browser for Microsoft -- it's a direct shot in its war against Google, and it shows. The beta of Internet Explorer 9 was released on Sept. 15, amidst much fanfare, ...
The three most popular browsers let you search and surf the Web without online ad networks and other trackers monitoring you--if you have the right privacy settings and add-ons. Dennis O'Reilly began ...
Microsoft's Internet Explorer took a lot of heat earlier this week, when the U.S. government and several big corporations said not to use the web browser due to a gaping security hole. Microsoft fixed ...
Lunascape, the only browser out there that can handle all three major web rendering engines — Firefox’s Gecko, Internet Explorer’s Trident and WebKit (Safari and Chrome) – received a makeover. The new ...
Microsoft’s Internet Explorer (IE) is about to lose the one market it’s had locked up for decades: the enterprise. According to research firm Gartner, enterprise usage of Chrome will surpass that of ...
Not too long ago the job of a Web browser was simple: Get the text from the Internet and pour it into the window. If a tag like comes along, change the font. Now the challenges are greater because the ...
The release of Google Chrome Frame, a new open source plugin that injects Chrome's renderer and JavaScript engine into Microsoft's browser, earlier this week had many web developers happily dancing ...
When I recently took a look at the brand new Chrome 10 Web browser, the results for the latest release candidate of Internet Explorer (IE) 9 puzzled me because they were so bad. Some of my readers ...
Google’s Chrome browser is shining brightly, and it’s not hard to see why. First, the stats: According to the latest NetApplications figures, Chrome now has 6.7 percent of the browser market–a ...
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