News
        
        Final IE 9 Version Gets Primetime Release
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- March 14, 2011
Internet Explorer 9, which Microsoft has had in development for one year, will be available for download  from this site at 9 p.m.  PST (12 a.m. EST) tonight.   Users of the IE 9  release candidate   will get an   automatic update to the  release-to-Web (RTW) version. 
IE 9's launch is part of the South by  Southwest (SXSW) festival currently being held   in Austin,   Texas. The  RTW version of IE 9 will be the browser's ninth release  since   the first platform preview appeared at the MIX 10 Web    developer event. 
Ryan Gavin, senior  director of IE   business and marketing, discussed some of the  highlights leading up   to the launch in a phone interview on Friday. According to Gavin, the browser has already made its mark   on  Microsoft's download history.
"We'll hit over 40 million downloads by the time we hit  RTW at   Monday 9 p.m. Pacific," Gavin said. "We're seeing now  upwards of 2   percent share already on Windows 7 for IE 9, even in beta stage.  It   was the fastest-adopted beta ever in Microsoft's history." 
Gavin attributed the positive response to community feedback  and   Microsoft's "transparent approach with IE 9 in terms of how we built    the browser." Microsoft used its platform previews to showcase its HTML 5    implementations leading up to the beta release. The platform previews   also  provided a glimpse into what developers can accomplish for their   Web sites via  hardware acceleration and IE 9's "clean, site-centric   design," he  added.
RTW Improvements
  Microsoft typically bakes in features by the time of its RTW  releases.   The development team assessed more than 17,000 comments in creating    this final release, according to Microsoft officials. Gavin described   some of  the improvements that happened from the time of the release   candidate to this final  RTW product.
"We've done a lot of work on low-end netbooks,  specifically tuning   for performance on lower-end hardware, where, if you go to the IE test drive demo, there's a  speed reading test, [and] if you run that over a lot   of hardware, you'll see a  lot of performance improvements with IE 9 in   the final RTW version," he  said. "On the area of our site-centric   design and how clean the browser is...one  of the pieces of feedback we   got from our partners is that they love [site] pinning.  They asked us   if we can allow them to promote and market multiple sites that  users   have pinned all from a single page...so that's a set of functionality that    we allowed. And we continue to make improvements in tracking   protection  including the respect for ActiveX controls, like Flash, and   respect in our  tracking protection work that we've done in our privacy   front, as well as  making the discoverability for that privacy work in   tracking protection more  prevalent in the browser."
In terms of user feedback, by far the most popular feature  of the   new browser is the ability to pin Web sites to the bottom of the screen    as if they were applications.
"When a user pins their site...on Windows 7, that results in a 50  percent increase in   engagement on their site," Gavin said. "When a  user pins them, it   really does make them more like an app, which means their  users are   more engaged."
Another feature added to IE 9 is the ability to display tabs  in a   single row. A minority of users really wanted that feature, Gavin    explained. 
IE 9 Security and  Privacy Controls
  Security represents and another issue of consideration.  Microsoft's   current IE 8 browser was successfully compromised at the recent    CanSecWest Pwn2Own hacking contest in which Google's Chrome browser   alone  escaped unscathed. The IE 8 holes were found by security   researcher Stephen  Fewer. Gavin indicated that Microsoft tried to get   its IE 9 browser considered  for the contest but was rebuffed.
"[The CanSecWest Pwn2Own hack result] was kind of a  no-news here   scenario," Gavin said. "We asked if they would include  IE 9 in the   contest, and they actually said, 'No' because IE 9 wasn't out. So  they   included IE 8, and of course IE 8 has been out for a while. But if you    look at some of the interfaces that we've done around IE 9 with   security...and the  privacy arena, IE 9 stands apart and we're quite proud   of the work done  there."
With regard to the potential security hole in IE 8, a blog  post by a   Microsoft employee recommends  "all users to upgrade to the  new   version of the browser in order to be immediately protected against    potential risk," according to a translation  of the blog from German.
Microsoft also offers privacy protection in IE 9 with its tracking    protection feature, which has to be turned on by the user. This feature   relies  on volunteer-contributed lists of URLs to help block tracking by   third parties,  although it also allows users to opt-in for tracking if   they wish. Possibly, this  approach will cut out the sort of third-party   tracking that determines  commissions on product referrals, which some   users may want to happen, as in  the case of Internet radio Web sites   that direct users toward sites to buy   CDs. Gavin explained that   IE 9 has no way to determine intent. "The  browser doesn't know what a   commission or an ad is," he said. Microsoft's  approach is just to hand   over control to the user about what gets tracked  during a browsing   session.
Microsoft has submitted its tracking protection technology to the   Worldwide Web Consortium (W3C), where it will be reviewed by committees    as a possible technical solution for adoption as a W3C recommendation.   That  effort is separate from any legislative or regulatory   considerations, Gavin  explained.
"That's the work that we've submitted at the W3C and  Mozilla has   since come out and said that they support that approach," he  said. 
Skipping the IE 8 Upgrade
  Microsoft had earlier recommended that those upgrading to Windows 7 first start using IE 8 to ensure    compatibility with Web-based apps and Web sites. However, Gavin   suggested that  organizations doing such OS upgrades could go straight   to using IE 9.
"When I sit down with IT managers and CTOs, and you  take them   through IE 9, and they're working through a Windows 7 deployment    process, they are very excited to go straight to IE 9," Gavin said. "IE    9 now blocks 99 percent of all malware, according to a third-party   study by NSS  [Labs], which is 33 times better than Chrome." 
Those who've started their migration won't have another step  to do with the release of IE 9, he contended.
"The reality is if they started work getting ready for  migration   from IE 6 to IE 8, that work carries nicely forward to IE 9. It's not    as if they have to start all over," Gavin said.
He also suggested that there would not be a problem removing  IE 9   after installation, even for consumer users. When IE 9 is removed, the    system automatically rolls back to IE 8.
"IE is a system component of Windows, and that's  because,   increasingly so, the browser is only as good as the operating system    and the device it's run on," Gavin said. "That a really a new  paradigm   that a lot of people still don't have their head around where they    think of the browser and the operating system and the device as   relatively  disconnected, and that's really changed with hardware   acceleration. So when you  upgrade to IE 9, we'll have that delivered   through Windows Update, which will  prompt you and let you know it's an   important update. You can click on that, it  will install, and you'll   have IE 9.  And  if for some reason they need to roll back, all they'll   need to do is go to that  Windows update and you can see the list of   installed updates there, and click 'uninstall'  and it will roll you   back to IE 8 quite easily."
IE 9 on Windows  Phones
  IE 9 will be coming to Windows phone at an as-yet  unspecified date.   Gavin said that the benefits of hardware acceleration will  transfer to   the phone when the new browser becomes available. 
Microsoft plans to deliver its IE 9 update to Windows phones  in its   second update (code-named "Mango"), which is planned for  release   sometime this year. The first update to Windows phone, which will add    copy and paste and support for CDMA, is expected to be released in the   latter  part of March.