Microsoft's IE Chief: The Browser Is Only as Good as the OS It Runs On
eWEEK talks with Dean Hachamovitch, Microsoft's top gun on the Internet Explorer browser team to go deeper on IE10.
Microsoft released a new preview version of its Internet Explorer 10 browser for Windows 7 Nov. 13. With the IE10 Release Preview for Windows 7, consumers can now enjoy a "fast and fluid" Web with the updated IE10 engine on their Windows 7 devices. IE10 is the default browser on Windows 8 and is built for touch. eWEEK Senior Editor Darryl K. Taft spoke with Dean Hachamovitch, Microsoft corporate vice president for Internet Explorer, about some of the changes in IE and what to expect from Microsoft on the browser front--now that the release preview of IE10 on Windows 7 is available for download. Hachamovitch is Microsoft's lead man on IE. See what he has to say. eWEEK: What's the primary message or theme you want to express to users about IE10? Same question for developers. Dean Hachamovitch: IE10 is an entirely new IE, and we built it be the best way to experience the Web on Windows. IE10 on Windows 8 brings a pretty exciting new set of capabilities to the Web, such as a browsing experience that is perfect for touch, a full-screen UI, security improvements that offer the best protection against the most common threats on the Web, improved performance, and much better support for HTML5 and CSS3 standards. The latter is particularly important from a dev perspective since we've added support for all of the standards that developers need, such as CSS 3D Transforms and CSS3 Transitions and Animations for rich visual effects and things like flexbox support for better page layouts. We've also added better storage with IndexedDB and HTML5 application cache and support for Web Sockets, HTML5 drag/drop, sand boxing and so forth. There's a lot here for developers to get excited about.






















