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        Report: IE 11 Will Get 'Enterprise Mode' in Windows 8.1 Update 1
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- February 03, 2014
Microsoft is planning to add an "enterprise mode" feature to its Internet Explorer 11 browser, according to a report Monday from ZDNet's Mary Jo  Foley.
The "enterprise mode" capability is designed to be a solution for the compatibility issues faced by organizations, Foley said.  If the rumor bears out, Microsoft may at last be paving the way  for   addressing a key migration problem that organizations face -- namely,   how  to upgrade Windows while still maintaining line-of-business Web   applications  built on Microsoft's older browser technologies. 
Foley cited another anonymous source that "confirmed" that the new enterprise mode is built into IE 11    version 11.0.3 and that it will be available with Microsoft's upcoming   Windows  8.1 Update 1 release. Microsoft hasn't said when it will   release the next  update to Windows 8.1, but it's rumored to appear as  early as mid-March.   Possibly, Microsoft may change the option to boot to  the Desktop   interface of Windows 8.1 with Update 1, making it the default  option,   according to recent speculations floated by The  Verge.
Microsoft has claimed over the years that Windows and  IE are intrinsically tied together, even though they get  released   separately. Former Microsoft CEO Bill Gates infamously argued the point that    IE is part of the operating system before Congress during the old   Netscape vs.  Microsoft antitrust battles. In the end, Microsoft managed   to establish its domination  in browser market share, largely by   leveraging its Windows monopoly.
Meanwhile, plenty of organizations built their Web sites and  Web   applications based on IE 6, which was tied to Windows XP. IE 8 is   similarly  tied to Windows 7, but support for IE 8 has already faded.   Google, for  instance, stopped supporting IE 8 more than a year ago and announced  last year that it no longer would support IE 9 for running Google Apps. 
Microsoft's browser product lifecycles are tied to those of Windows,    and new versions of IE get released with each major Windows release.    Consequently, organizations can get in a double bind: They feel the   pressures  to upgrade Windows but must also address potential Web site   and Web application  compatibility issues associated with older versions   of IE. Such concerns can  delay, complicate or even impede OS migration   plans. 
The problem has gone unaddressed for so long that companies  such as Browsium have sprouted up to fill the breach. Browsium offers its Catalyst    solution that organizations can use to prioritize browser use, depending   on the  Web site or Web application accessed. It also offers an Ion   solution that helps  remediate older IE browser technologies. 
So far, details about the rumored enterprise mode for IE  feature   have not been disclosed. It's not clear if Microsoft will at last   provide  a solution for organizations that find themselves stuck on   older IE  technologies.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.