Microsoft announced some heartbreaking news for Internet Explorer users on Valentine's Day: Internet Explorer is no more. The company has permanently disabled the desktop version of Internet Explorer ...
Microsoft’s Internet Explorer has died many deaths over the years, but today is the one that counts. The final version of the browser, Internet Explorer 11, will no longer receive support or security ...
After 27 years in service, Internet Explorer is being shut down. As of Wednesday, Microsoft will no longer support the browser, and as such, former users are giving it the send-off it deserves: ...
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Internet Explorer is finally headed out to pasture. As of Wednesday, Microsoft will no longer support the once-dominant browser that legions of web surfers loved to hate — and a ...
MIAMI - It's the end of an era for Microsoft's Internet Explorer. On Tuesday, the company officially disabled Internet Explorer 11 and older versions on its desktops. Internet Explorer debuted in 1995 ...
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 ...
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (WANE) — This Valentine’s Day didn’t show love to those who experienced the early stages of the world wide web. As of Tuesday, Microsoft has officially disabled Internet Explorer for ...
A Korean engineer commissioned a gravestone for Internet Explorer, Microsoft's now-defunct web browser. Courtesy of Kiyoung Jung/AFP via A Korean software engineer couldn’t pass up an opportunity to ...
What happens now if you're using Internet Explorer 8, 9 or 10. — -- Internet Explorer is dead as we know it. The ubiquitous browser, which made its debut two decades ago, has been officially put ...
For Jung Ki-young, a South Korean software engineer, Microsoft’s decision to retire its Internet Explorer web browser marked the end of a quarter-century love-hate relationship with the technology. To ...
It’s the end times, the last cache, the final 404 page, for Internet Explorer. Microsoft finally laid its much maligned web browser to rest on June 15, when it announced that it would cease supporting ...
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