Microsoft hints at general plan for IE 8

Microsoft will continue to prioritize security and ease of use in the forthcoming Internet Explorer 8 and will seek to improve Web development with current standards compatibility, according to the company.

At Microsoft's Mix '07 conference in Las Vegas this week, IE platform architect Chris Wilson recapped Microsoft's development priorities in the making of Internet Explorer (IE) 7 and outlined some of its goals for the next version of its browser.

Wilson said Microsoft intends to create a follow-on version, IE 8, within two years of IE 7's release, which came out in October.

The priorities Microsoft set for IE 7, Wilson said, are the same for IE 8: strong security, ease of use and Web development improvements.

"It's clear we have a lot to do with the Web developer platform," he said addressing an audience of mostly Web developers at Mix.

Specifically, he said Microsoft will invest more in layout and adhering to the Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) 2.1 specifications. He also said Microsoft wants to make its browser object model more interoperable "to make it easier to work with other browsers and allow more flexible programming patterns."

In addition, he said the Ajax Web programming style needs more client-side application programming interfaces to allow developers to create more powerful applications.

"There's work in the standardization bodies to do local storage and get better security models," Wilson said, adding that Microsoft is working with the W3C on standardizing HTML version 5 and XHTML version 1 and 1.1.

He said adherence to standards is increasingly important to Web site developers but Microsoft is in a "challenging" position as it introduces more standards compliance.

Because previous versions of Internet Explorer strayed from standards, new versions of Internet Explorer, such as IE 7, have caused some Web sites to not work for end users, he said.

"Web development compatibility is really crucial for building applications and...for us to deploy browsers (but) it has to be an evolutionary step," he said, noting that half a billion people use some version of Internet Explorer. "If we say, 'Here is your new browser--it's standards compatible,' we actually disrupt the existing ecosystem and it doesn't actually make it better for anyone."

More from News.com on this story's topics

IE

RSS feed

Programming

Create an email alert | RSS feed

Web browsers

Create an email alert | RSS feed

Microsoft

Create an email alert | RSS feed

See more CNET content tagged:
Web development, Microsoft Internet Explorer 7, Microsoft Internet Explorer, ease of use, standards

36 comments (Page 1 of 2)
IE 8 - Another forced issue of trouble?
by GEBERWEIN May 3, 2007 4:16 PM PDT
Every time Mickey Soft does anything that forces their version of security upon the world outside of their private realm it creates problems for the non-computer talented user. For some dumb reason it is impossible to simply turn off the MS Security and use another system. I have Norton which many seem to agree is superior to the Redmond spawned system. I have certain security settings in Outlook and IE that makes everyone play nice in the sandbox. But, when IE7 installed it reset all mine to the default Windows Security levels. Then there were a couple of later updates that did the same thing. Even though I have the settings so Windows Security is OFF - it truly is not. If all they are going to do is plug holes in their codes I agree with that type action but not automatically changing the ability of my trusted sites, or the http addresses I know are clean enough, to allow them to work. Big Brother is Here and he lives in Redmond WA.
Reply to this comment View all 3 replies
Please, please, please...
by MadKiwi May 3, 2007 5:32 PM PDT
... make it standards compliant!
Reply to this comment View reply
IE... HAHAHHAHa
by bobmarksdale May 3, 2007 7:47 PM PDT
One word: Firefox.
Reply to this comment View all 5 replies
As a web developer
by Ian Kirkland May 3, 2007 8:50 PM PDT
there hasn't been one verison of IE so far that draw a web page properly, expecially if you were using CSS. What a disaster! I am currently building a web site that has a single line of text in a
after the main
for the page. On all browsers, both Mac and Windows (IE 6 included) it draws in the correct place. In IE & it draws 100 px higher, apparently inside properly colsed
s above it. So IE7 appears to be even worse than IE6. IE 8 will be more compliant and standards supportive? I doubt it!
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
Where do I sign up?
by MSSlayer May 3, 2007 11:02 PM PDT
An even uglier, clunkier, less secure browser? I can't wait!
Reply to this comment
Scaring us this early?
by bobbydi May 4, 2007 3:41 AM PDT
Microsoft is sure starting early to try to scare us into using their next IE. They used to quietly put out a new version and only change the version number one digit on the right end. Now they start trying to scare us months ahead of time.
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
Good to know standards support is coming
by toosday May 4, 2007 4:06 AM PDT
Finally, the big browsers will all support CSS standards. (I'm assuming that the next release of Safari will support Gmail's Java standards, that is.) Anyone know when the next Firefox is dropping? That's supposed to be when the browser supports the rest of the standards.
Reply to this comment
Deja-vu?? Deja-vu??
by HomeLights May 4, 2007 5:25 AM PDT
"Microsoft will continue to prioritize security and ease of use in the forthcoming Internet Explorer 8" Ha ha ha! Nice one! Haven't we heard this with every release of anything Microsoft?? Don't get me wrong, I'll do my part and install IE8 and patch it every week and report bug crashed daily to them, but isn't it time to admit "We're releasing something so be prepared to patch it every week for a few months" Be straight with the users and I think you'll find them more recptive to you.
Reply to this comment
Microsoft please take notice!
by Ted Miller May 4, 2007 5:40 AM PDT
I really hate IE7 and found it very hard to use. It looked to me like a jigsaw puzzle with a bunch of pieces missing. That is until I put back the "Menu Bar" and it improve a little. I would have liked it to remember all the Tabs on a restart. Well I guess you will not take notice, because you never take notice.
Reply to this comment View reply
Standards-compliant. Coming in 2015.
by Lucky Lou May 4, 2007 12:25 PM PDT
Evolutionary steps toward standards compliance, because if they just did the right thing it wouldn't be better? People wouldn't all fix their web sites immediately to work with a compliant IE v8?????
Reply to this comment
1 | 2 | Next 10 Comments >>
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement
RSS Feeds
Add headlines from CNET News.com to your homepage or feedreader.
Google
Yahoo
MSN
More feeds available in our RSS feed index.
Today's Top Stories
A reminder of why Microsoft wanted Yahoo
Facebook pulls 'stalker list' tool
Microsoft fixes holes in Windows, Word, Publisher
HP to acquire EDS for $13.9 billion
Online satirist becomes test case for paid content
Most Popular Stories
Nintendo launches WiiWare with six games
Welcome to the social mess?
HP in talks to buy EDS
Mac Office sales soar on Apple's gains
HP to acquire EDS for $13.9 billion
Resource center from News.com sponsors
You can do more when your phone runs Windows®
Windows Mobile

See it all at StartDoingMore.com Start Doing More

Start doing more
Get More Done with Windows Mobile

There's so much more you can do when your phone runs Windows. StartDoingMore.com>

Familiar Microsoft Software and Services

With a Windows Mobile phone, your easy-to-use Microsoft software go wherever you go.

Choose the perfect phone for you

Side, flip, qwerty, touchscreen? See More>

Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Microsoft (-0.70%) -0.21 29.78
Dow Jones Industrials (-0.34%) -44.13 12,832.18
S&P 500 (-0.04%) -0.54 1,403.04
NASDAQ (0.27%) 6.63 2,495.12
CNET TECH (-0.06%) -0.99 1,744.82
  Symbol Lookup



advertisement
On CHOW: Does drinking ice water burn calories?
Advanced
search
Advanced
search
Visit other CNET Networks sites: