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March 03, 2008 12:00 AM

About Face: IE 8 to Support Web Standards by Default

Windows IT Pro
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Reversing an earlier decision that would have made its next Web browser less compatible with existing Web standards, Microsoft yesterday announced that Internet Explorer (IE) 8 will use standards-based rendering by default. The announcement comes on the eve of MIX'08, Microsoft's Web development conference, held this week in Las Vegas.

"IE 8 has been significantly enhanced, and was designed with great support for current Internet standards," says Microsoft Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie. "Our initial plan had been to use IE 7-compatible behavior as the default setting for IE 8, to minimize potential impact on the world's existing Web sites. We have now decided to make our most current standards-based mode the default in IE 8."

The move should cheer proponents of Web standards who had complained about Microsoft's original plan for IE 8, which will support three Web page rendering modes. The first, called Quirks mode, is designed for compatibility with older Web sites that were made with IE 6 or older IE versions in mind. The second, IE 7 mode, will render Web pages identically to IE 7, the current version of the browser. The third mode, now the default, will more closely adhere to existing Web standards, as do competing browsers like Mozilla Firefox and Apple Safari.

This is no small change for Microsoft, which has always valued backwards compatibility over forward-leaning technologies. On the other hand, this decision may also remove some legal questions hanging over the company, including an EU antitrust investigation into Microsoft's decision to bundle IE with its dominant Windows products. If IE 8 renders Web sites according to Web standards by default, the company's competitors can't complain that the browser was designed to lock-in customers.

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Comments
  • Will
    4 years ago
    Mar 06, 2008

    ACID 3,

    Everyone's back on the failboat.

  • Joe
    4 years ago
    Mar 05, 2008

    "The better question is how could anyone at Microsoft have thought that non-standard rendering by default was a GOOD idea?"

    easy - the same people that cherish prior customers made the initial decision.

    Paul said it best when he said: "This is no small change for Microsoft, which has always valued backwards compatibility over forward-leaning technologies."

    i'm sure the Windows client team would love to just scrap all support for legacy code and start from scratch with a brand new all-64-bit code based on only newer technologies (VT-enabled kernel, UEFI, PCIe-only, etc., not to mention support for legacy x86 opcodes), but in the real world, that just ain't gonna happen. sorry.

    XP

  • spar
    4 years ago
    Mar 05, 2008

    If Ray Ozzie made this happen, and if Ray ends up running Microsoft, I might respect that company again.

    The better question is how could anyone at Microsoft have thought that non-standard rendering by default was a GOOD idea?

  • Joe
    4 years ago
    Mar 04, 2008

    "in addition to their currently broken rendering/JS engine, use an open source rendering/JS engine, like the Mozilla one or WebKit"

    ya you know, when their "broken" rendering engine is used to render almost all of the interwebs, they should downgrade it to something that's even less "standards"-friendly....[sic]

    XP

  • felipe_alfaro,felipe_alfaro
    4 years ago
    Mar 04, 2008

    What Microsoft really needs to do is, in addition to their currently broken rendering/JS engine, use an open source rendering/JS engine, like the Mozilla one or WebKit.

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