Goodbye, Internet Explorer. We hardly knew ye:
Updated June 15, 2022 at 8:52 AM ETThe much-reviled 26-year-old web browser once dominated the internet, but never shook its reputation as the slow, buggy net-surfing option., is survived by Microsoft Edge, the next-generation browser Microsoft first put out in 2015.in June 2021, saying that Microsoft Edge was faster, more secure and compatible with early-internet websites — qualities its predecessor was maligned for lacking.
The ghost of Internet Explorer will live on for those who choose to believe: Edge offers a built-in Internet Explorer mode. When Windows introduced Explorer in August 1995, the browser's success killed off the once-leading Netscape Navigator. At its height in the early 2000s, ExplorerBut Microsoft failed to keep pace with competitors, and Internet Explorer began to lose respect among users for its poor security, bungled renderings of web pages and sluggishness.
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