nsane.forums Posted October 27, 2012 Share Posted October 27, 2012 Before Mozilla went into overdrive and released new versions of Firefox every other week, Microsoft used to send the team cupcakes for each major releas. Now Mozilla has returned the favor. Microsoft, back in the day, used to send the Firefox development team cupcakes each time they shipped a new version of the browser. The tradition carried on for several major Firefox releases until the company expedited version control and now seemingly releases a new version of the browser every other month. With the release of Windows 8, the IE team is also celebrating the next major release of their browser, IE10. Seeing an opportunity to repay past baked good debts, the Mozilla team delivered a cake to the IE10 team as a way of saying congratulations. It's always reassuring to see corporate giants do something good for a change. In a world where suing the pants off your competitor is common-place, a pat on the back to a competitor is a remarkable gesture considering that these two entities are competitors. Now, how can we get in on this baked-good swapping action? View: Original Article Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LOQUILLO Posted October 27, 2012 Share Posted October 27, 2012 HTML5 and CSS3 are the pillars of this new IE10, but after all the development, users will be the winners, and then IE10 will rise from the other browsers that already used for ages, HTML5 and CSS3. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dcs18 Posted October 28, 2012 Share Posted October 28, 2012 IE will rise only and only in the unlikely event of other browsers stepping into coma (in the interim period.) :think: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrator DKT27 Posted October 28, 2012 Administrator Share Posted October 28, 2012 IE will rise only and only in the unlikely event of other browsers stepping into coma (in the interim period.) :think: All the benchmarks point out that IE10 is fastest than them all and has great user reviews. It will have a big positive bump in usage, but on longer run, people still hate it from it's past, so unlikely that people will go back to it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gabben Posted October 28, 2012 Share Posted October 28, 2012 Not just IE past is the problem. Microsoft still not updating regulary like Chromium or Firefox or Opera. So yeah it will be fast and good when they release it but a month later all the others will be better. Not just the speed matters, HTML5 and other web technologys are constantly evolving so it's critical to monitor these changes and browser developers support the changes with the updates. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrator DKT27 Posted October 28, 2012 Administrator Share Posted October 28, 2012 Not just IE past is the problem. Microsoft still not updating regulary like Chromium or Firefox or Opera. So yeah it will be fast and good when they release it but a month later all the others will be better. Not just the speed matters, HTML5 and other web technologys are constantly evolving so it's critical to monitor these changes and browser developers support the changes with the updates. If I'm not wrong, IE too will start faster updates. Not as fast as Firefox or Chrome, but 6 months or every year will see a new IE update. Well, atleast how I remember it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gabben Posted October 29, 2012 Share Posted October 29, 2012 Not just IE past is the problem. Microsoft still not updating regulary like Chromium or Firefox or Opera. So yeah it will be fast and good when they release it but a month later all the others will be better. Not just the speed matters, HTML5 and other web technologys are constantly evolving so it's critical to monitor these changes and browser developers support the changes with the updates. If I'm not wrong, IE too will start faster updates. Not as fast as Firefox or Chrome, but 6 months or every year will see a new IE update. Well, atleast how I remember it. 6 months would be great. Year would be too long imho. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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