It's super snappy, but some of its headline features don't appear to work.
If your desktop, laptop or mobile device is still running Internet Explorer, you should know that last month, Microsoft officially decided to end what was once its most popular browser. This means ...
At Fast Company, Alex Pasternack writes: What was the World Wide Web like at the start? Long before it became the place we think and work and talk, the air that we (and the bots) now breathe, no ...
Microsoft is officially retiring its old pride, the Internet Explorer (IE) browser, marking the end of a 27-year-old era in the history of the Internet. On Valentine's Day, the tech giant announced ...
Internet Explorer 11 was never Windows 10’s primary browser—that would be the old, pre-Chromium version of Microsoft Edge. But IE did continue to ship with Windows 10 for compatibility reasons, and ...