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Comments [0] | Posted on Friday, March 14, 2008

IE8

About a week back Microsoft announced Internet Explorer 8 at the MIX08 conference and most interesting part is that a developer beta is now available for download.

You can go ahead and download the beta here

What's New in IE8?

Firstly, IE8 comes with lot of changes in it's internal architecture that improves readability, performance, and scalability of the browser.

Now, How it works, Andy Zeigler, Program Manager on IE Foundation Team at Microsoft explains some of the details.

Andy Zeigler Said:

You may have noticed that computers come pre-loaded with all sorts of software. While a lot of this software is useful and works well, some of it, including IE add-ons, can crash and interfere with your browsing experience. Internet Explorer 3rd-party add-ons are COM-based, which enables developers to write high-performance add-ons with powerful features. This also means that IE and running add-ons share the same process and memory address space, so when an add-on crashes, it causes the whole browser to crash. According to an analysis we did of our Windows Error Reporting data, over 70% of all IE hangs and crashes are caused by 3rd-party add-ons. We work closely with software vendors of the most frequently installed IE add-ons to help improve the quality of their add-ons. However, due to the large number available add-ons, it is difficult to provide outreach to every developer.

The IE Process Model

Part of what we’ve done with LCIE is to split the frame from the tabs, and allow them to function more autonomously. As a refresher, here’s a somewhat simplified view of the IE7 process model

IE8 Process Model

In the IE7 model, each browser window (UI Frame) usually has its own process. There are a couple of exceptions. For example, if you press ctrl-n to open a new window, IE creates a new UI frame in the same process. The tabs, toolbar extensions, browser helper objects, and ActiveX controls all reside in the same process as the browser window. The problem with this model is that a single access violation, stack overflow, or any other type of failure will cause your entire browser, and all its tabs, to crash.

Below is a diagram of how we’ve changed the process model in IE8.

IE8 Process Model

There are a number of notable changes here:

  • Tabs are isolated from the frame, and are located in separate processes
    This gives IE the opportunity to isolate many failures to the tab process, thereby reducing the amount of damage done to the rest of your browsing session.
  • The frame and the broker object are located in the same process
    This is a win for startup performance. The broker object is responsible for examining a URL, and determining if it should be loaded under Protected Mode or not, and launching IE at the appropriate integrity level. We no longer have to wait for the protected mode broker object’s process to startup before loading the rest of the browser.
  • Low and Medium integrity tabs can reside in the same UI frame
    The Windows Integrity Mechanism operates on a per-process basis. Now that we can place tabs into their own processes, we can turn Protected Mode on or off on a per-tab basis. This is a big usability improvement. You no longer need separate browser windows to view sites in and out of protected mode.

Now, that's one major change that truly addresses IE's past issues.

What's next!, Yes, Now come the interesting part, something for developers, so let me proceed with what's in the box for my dev mates. :-)

IE8 Developer Tools

All this time there were tools which offered help to web developers to developer and debug apps for IE, but mostly came as third party tools. One of the most popular tools that came as a toolbar from IE Team was the IE Developer Toolbar, which offered huge time saving and productive tools to help web developers to debug their apps.

IE8 Developer Tools provides huge improvements and productive tools to help developers build better and stable apps in no time.

What kind of tools and improvements does IE8 Developer Tools offer?
  • Internet Explorer 8 simplifies the process of debugging by including developer tools out of the box and making those tools easy to use. Instead of having to find, download, and install a separate debugging application, just press SHIFT+F12, or click the developer tools icon in the command bar.
  • In addition to simplifying the debugging process, IE8 Developer Tools offer a new perspective on your site. Instead of just a source view, the tool provides visibility into Internet Explorer’s internal representation of the site. For example, the DOM tree in the tool is built from the tree IE builds internally to display the page, not from your source. So if script changes the tree, IE8 shows you the updated tree.
  • The Internet Explorer 8 Developer Tools also provide the ability to experiment and iterate rapidly by letting you edit a site within IE. For example, once you’ve found a style rule or property you’re interested in, click a checkbox to enable or disable it, or click an attributes in the DOM tree to edit it in-place
  • The tools also provide easy access to all available rendering modes so you can test different modes quickly.

 

IE8 Improvements And New Features

Domain Highlighting

At a glance, the most visible change with IE8 is Domain Highlighting. Internet Explorer 8 will automatically highlight what it considers to be the owning domain of whatever site you’re currently viewing. This helps users identify the real site they’re on when a website attempts to deceive them. The screen shot below shows how IE8’s Domain Highlighting can help users spot these attacks

IE8 Domain Highlighting

Support For Pasting Multi-Line URLs

IE8 will automatically strip out excess carriage returns and line feeds within a URL when pasted into the Address Bar. Many web e-mail applications automatically split long lines into multiple lines, which meant you couldn’t easily copy and paste them into the browser. Users can now highlight an entire URL, no matter how many lines it spans, and paste it directly into the Address Bar.

Example: if you copy and paste the next 3 lines into the Address Bar of IE7, only the first line (an incomplete fragment of the entire URL) will appear. In IE8, the entire URL will appear:

http:/
/www.chiragbatra.com/
blog/default.aspx

New Functionality on the Favorites bar:

The Favorites bar, previously known as the Links toolbar, has been updated with great new functionality that helps you get information from your favorite websites quickly and easily. The new IE8 Favorites bar still has your favorite links just one click away, but also allows you to add WebSlices (new feature debuting in IE8) and feeds to the Favorites bar, facilitating your navigation experience. The WebSlices and feeds on the Favorites bar will check for updates to content on your favorite websites without requiring navigation to those websites.

WebSlice

WebSlices bring your favorite pieces of the web with you. WebSlices are portions of a webpage that you can subscribe to and view updates directly from the Favorites bar.

WebSlices let you subscribe to a portion of webpage to get updates and view these changes without having to go back to the site.  Let’s say that you’re an eBay, and you’ve got your heart set on a 80’s Swatch watch. With WebSlices, I can subscribe to the auction item and know when there is a price change directly on the browser chrome.

try out WebSlices on these sites

  • StumbleUpon – Get the buzz on latest sites.
  • Facebook – Keep track of your friends’ status.

Activities

This is another great feature that comes with IE8, with Activities, you can access your services from any webpage. Activities simplify the common task of copying, navigating, and pasting into a single action. Just make a selection and click on the Activity button or context menu to view your services.

Here are some other Activities that you may find helpful:

Cheers!

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Comments [1] | Posted on Friday, September 07, 2007

A day back Microsoft announced Silverlight 1.0 final release for Mac and Windows. A cross-browser, cross-platform plug-in for delivering the next generation of .NET based media experiences and rich interactive applications for the web.

Some of its features include:

  • Built-in codec support for playing VC-1 and WMV video, and MP3 and WMA audio within a browser.  The VC-1 codec is a big step forward for incorporating media within a web experience - since it supports very efficiently playing high-quality, high definition video in the browser.  It is a standards-based media format that is implemented in all HD-DVD and Blueray DVD players, and is supported by hundreds of millions of mobile devices, XBOX 360s, PlayStation 3s, and Windows Media Centers (enabling you to encode content once and run it on all of these devices + Silverlight unmodified).  It enables you to use a huge library of existing video content and provides access to the broad ecosystem of existing Windows Media tools, components, vendors and hardware. 
  • Silverlight supports the ability to progressively download and play media content from any web-server.  You can point Silverlight at any URL containing video/audio media content, and it will download it and enable you to play it within the browser.  No special server software is required, and Silverlight can work with any web-server (including Apache on Linux).  Microsoft will also be releasing an IIS 7.0 media pack that enables rich bandwidth throttling features that you can enable on your web-server for free.
  • Silverlight also optionally supports built-in media streaming.  This enables you to use a streaming server like Windows Media Server on the backend to efficiently stream video/audio (note: Windows Media Server is a free product that runs on Windows Server).  Streaming brings some significant benefits in that: 1) it can improve the end-user's experience when they seek around in a large video stream, and 2) it can dramatically lower your bandwidth costs. 

  • Silverlight enables you to create rich UI and animations, and blend vector graphics with HTML to create compelling content experiences.  It supports a Javascript programming model to develop these.  One benefit of this is that it makes it really easy to integrate these experiences within AJAX web-pages (since you can write Javascript code to update both the HTML and XAML elements together). 

  • Silverlight makes it easy to build rich video player interactive experiences.  You can blend together its media capabilities with the vector graphic support to create any type of media playing experience you want.  Silverlight includes the ability to "go full screen" to create a completely immersive experience, as well as to overlay menus/content/controls/text directly on top of running video content (allowing you to enable DVD like experiences).  Silverlight also provides the ability to resize running video on the fly without requiring the video stream to be stopped or restarted.

Silverlight for Linux

Microsoft also announced Silverlight support on Linux and its partnership with Novell to provide a great Silverlight implementation for Linux.  Microsoft will be delivering Silverlight Media Codecs for Linux, and Novell will be building a 100% compatible Silverlight runtime implementation called "Moonlight".

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Comments [0] | Posted on Sunday, June 03, 2007

Few days back Google took an amazing step towards Rich Internet Application arena and announced Google Gears. A tiny (700k) browser plug-in download that lets a Web Application store data on your local machine.

Offline Mode

As for now only Google Reader has been introduced with Offline Mode feature and I'm hoping to see Google's other Web Apps to kick start with this feature too.

Goog_Dialog

Above is a Security Dialog box that pops up as soon you start or load a Web App that is using Google Gear and it lets you know that Google Gear is going to store data on your local machine. Google Gears uses SQLite to store information locally and uses SQL from JavaScript to CRUD (Create, Read, Update and Delete) data.

Here are few links to know more about Google Gears.

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Comments [0] | Posted on Saturday, May 19, 2007

If in case you have missed the news or didn't get it as yet then WPF/E is now called Silverlight. Yeah! Its kinda a kewl name.

Few weeks back Microsoft at MIX07 made a number of announcements and showed off Silverlight. Silverlight is a cross-browser, cross-platform run-time that enables media and interactive content and application scenarios or say its a browser independent version of the Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF). Silverlight currently supports IE6, IE7, Firefox and Safari browsers on both Windows and the Mac and is installed by a single click installation that takes only couple of seconds.

Microsoft Silverlight 1.0 Beta is now available for download including a Go Live license which means Microsoft customers can deploy their Silverlight applications.

Here couple of links that I'd recommend to check...

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Comments [0] | Posted on Tuesday, August 08, 2006

It looks Microsoft is listening to it's customers.

I had mentioned a while back that we planned to call the version of IE7 in Windows Vista “Internet Explorer 7+”. Well, the feedback we got on the blog was overwhelming – many of you didn’t like it. So, as we’ve said on our website, we heard you. I’m pleased to announce that we’re switching the name back to “Internet Explorer 7”. No plus. No dot x. Just “Internet Explorer 7”.

Specifically, here are the official full names:

  • For Windows XP: “Windows Internet Explorer 7 for Windows XP”
  • For Windows Vista: “Windows Internet Explorer 7 in Windows Vista”
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Comments [0] | Posted on Saturday, June 10, 2006

Yahoo! has not introduced anything new they have just customized IE 7 beta 2 to meet their needs. Yahoo! has used the beta version of the Internet Explorer Administration Kit (IEAK) to customize IE7 beta 2. It is available to all developers and partners who want to create their own customized versions of IE7, as well as IT pros who want to use it to ease enterprise deployment.

Download Yahoo! optimized IE7 beta 2

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Comments [0] | Posted on Thursday, June 01, 2006

Yes, this is the easiest & cheapest way to check out how your website will render in IE7 & Safari without installing any of them in your box. 

Check it out iCapture, ieCapture

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Comments [0] | Posted on Sunday, May 28, 2006

Internet Explorer 7 Plus

Recently IE team announced the official name of IE for Windows Vista, "Internet Explorer 7+". While all versions of IE7 are built from the same code base, there are some important differences in IE7+, most significantly the addition of Windows Vista-only features like Protected Mode, Parental Controls, and improved Network Diagnostics and most of these features take advantage of big changes in Windows Vista. What I feel is the naming part will just cause big confusions among the IE users.

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Comments [0] | Posted on Monday, May 01, 2006

I installed IE7 Beta 2 the latest build and I came up with a strange issue with the Quick Tabs that they were not at all visible. I tried reinstalling it but nothing really helped you can understand how it feels so at last I reported this issue to the support and it was fixed. Thanks a lot! J

http://blogs.msdn.com/ie/archive/2006/05/01/587745.aspx
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About

Chirag Batra is a Software Consultant and Microsoft Certified Professional.

This is his Personal Weblog where he shares his thoughts about Software, Web & Life.

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