Microsoft Offers Phone Support For IE 7 195
An anonymous reader writes "The BBC is running a short piece detailing Microsoft's newest step in testing Internet Explorer 7, which just went into Beta 2 yesterday. They're now offering free phone support to U.S., German, and Japanese users who try out the trial software." From the article: "'We believe that IE 7, even at this beta stage, is a significant improvement and we want as many people as possible to try it and use it,' said the browser development team in a post on its blog. 'IE 7 is feature complete and has been through significant compatibility and reliability testing. People (especially technology enthusiasts) will have a good experience with it,' continued the post. Microsoft said the new version addresses some problems affecting banking and news sites. It is also designed to be more secure than the current version, with built-in protection against malicious software and online phishing scams."
ActiveX? (Score:2, Insightful)
So are they doing away with ActiveX?
Re:ActiveX? (Score:2)
Re:ActiveX? (Score:3, Interesting)
How long do you think it will take before an exploit is found that allows a malicious web site to turn on ActiveX without the user's permission? Bets, anyone?
Typical Microsoft Response (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Typical Microsoft Response (Score:1)
disclaimer: I disdain msft as much as the next guy, but I'm all for fair commentary.
Re:Typical Microsoft Response (Score:1)
Beta... (Score:2)
Wikipedia:
Now that is some title... (Score:5, Informative)
Nope. Support by phone will be available. MSIE won't support a phone.
Re:Now that is some title... (Score:1)
Re:Now that is some title... (Score:2)
Re:Now that is some title... (Score:2)
US, German and Japanese only? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:US, German and Japanese only? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:US, German and Japanese only? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:US, German and Japanese only? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:US, German and Japanese only? (Score:2)
Re:US, German and Japanese only? (Score:2)
Re:US, German and Japanese only? (Score:2)
Re:US, German and Japanese only? (Score:2)
Um, I think you mean "liberated" unless, of course, you'd like to join the Vice President on his next hunting trip.
Re:US, German and Japanese only? (Score:2)
I'm just listing the most grievous examples:
Brittain - India
Belgium - The Congo
Portugal - Brazil
Spain - Mexico/Central America
Russia - well Russia
China - Tibet
Greece - Turkey
Turkey - Greece
Egypt - Israel
Israel - Egypt
Italy - well Italy
the list goes on and on and on.... there are no innocent peoples in the world, just more recently heinous ones
Improved Windows Update experience (Score:5, Funny)
Seems to me... (Score:2, Insightful)
What they don't understand is that their business model needs changing. No longer is software that's outdated the moment you release it that has security holes in it left and right that don't have patches going to be tolerated.
We have an open source browser with wide spread web support. I don't care if you have the tabs or not, I'
Re:Seems to me... (Score:1)
Other people understanding not what said is being?
Seems to you... (Score:2)
You mean, like, the 31 last years ?
Well, they don't when they can afford not to...
Re:Seems to me... (Score:2)
Re:Seems to me... (Score:2)
Most of them switched to linux.
Re:Seems to me... (Score:2)
We've already seen what they do as the dominant player in a market, they get there and then they shut down the competitors and stagnate, leaving their users screwed by a new bug everyday.
fyi: x64 support now there too.. (Score:2, Informative)
Shame that as usual the phone support feature is not available in the UK...(not that I really care, FF is fine).
Note that the download link is http://www.microsoft.com/windows/ie/downloads/defa ult.mspx [microsoft.com] (where you can choose your desired poison) as opposed to the one in the stub (which links to the technology overview document).
I am hoping (Score:5, Insightful)
I can image that we will see a lot of people here at
- Andrew
But, the focus is wrong (Score:2)
I think too many software companies still have the philosophy that more is better. In reality we just want the tool to work right the first time and be secure. I think Microsoft should focus all its effort on producing a fast totally secure web browser first. Then when that is done create a API in which you add-on features you want (which will not break nor leave the origi
Re:But, the focus is wrong (Score:2)
I think you misunderstood the article (unless I did). What they are saying is if you use the beta and have problems you can call them on the phone for help with the issue, not that IE is having some type of Skype functionality. Its simply that they are offering free phone support (call if you have a problem) to all the beta testers.
Re:But, the focus is wrong (Score:2)
Re:But, the focus is wrong (Score:2)
They're not supporting some phone or other *in* the browser, or supporting the browser *on* a phone, they're supporting the (beta of the) browser *by* phone.
Re:I suggest (Score:2)
If you're happy and you know it clap your hands...
Re:I am hoping (Score:2)
Do you know how MS is making this available? Hint: you have to go looking for it, it's not presented to you in Windows Update.
Neat, less grief for me. (Score:2)
Of course, MS probably won't have people install Firefox nearly as often as I do...
Yesterday? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Yesterday? (Score:2)
Re:Yesterday? (Score:2)
Re:Yesterday? (Score:2)
Re:Yesterday? (Score:2)
Re:Yesterday? (Score:2)
Re:Yesterday? (Score:1)
Re:Yesterday? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Yesterday? (Score:4, Funny)
Dvorak's spin (Score:2, Informative)
Summary: MS's biggest problem is IE and they should just dump it.
Re:Dvorak's spin (Score:2)
Firefox doesn't really have a company MS can put out of business or buy up, there is not monentary pressure they can put directly against it to kill it. At worst, it will float around berefit of the Mozilla Corp, but someone will still likely be working on it, be it IBM, Redhat, SuSe, or j random hacker.
Opera isn't primarily tied to
Bug Catcher? (Score:1)
Free Phone Support (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, that's right. You get this lovely tripod with gripping arm, absolutely free with your trial of IE7 Beta. Now, when you are stuck on interminable hold with Microsoft Tech support, you won't have to hold the phone up to your ear -- the Phone Support will do all the work! It frees up your hands so you can send hate mail to Bill Gates while still waiting for the next available tech support specialist.
Obvious criticisms (Score:3, Insightful)
With IE7, they seem to be attempting to bring some of that newness back, or maybe it's just my own perspective. In any case, I'm not a new or unwashed user any longer and I have real concerns over vulnerabilities and other annoyances. Will ActiveX remain as the most exploitable part of MSIE and any OS that uses it? Will CSS remain 'broken?' (I shouldn't say broken since that word implies accident and gives the impression that it's unintentional. CSS is incompatible and is intentional sabotage on Microsoft's part against the world of compatibility. In spite of all standards agreed upon, Microsoft in all its power and glory is unwilling to be compatible with the rest of the world.)
Not evil enough (Score:1)
Microsoft IE7 phone support (Score:5, Funny)
"Press 1 to be told to reboot, press 2 to be told to reinstall IE7, press 3 to be told to reinstall the OS, press 4 to be told to apply next month's patches to the OS, press 5 to be told to contact the website's administrator for writing non-IE7 compliant HTML, press 8 to purchase Microsoft malware protection services..."
Re:Microsoft IE7 phone support (Score:2)
Oops ! My phone BSOD'ed !
Broken rendering (Score:5, Insightful)
I suppose the most we can hope for with IE7 is that it stays broken in the same ways as previous versions, so we don't have to learn a whole new raft of ugly hacks just to a get a page to look presentable.
Re:Broken rendering (Score:1, Troll)
Haven't you learned? Microsoft doesn't support standards, it writes them. That way, whatever broken stuff
Re:Broken rendering (Score:2)
Re:Broken rendering (Score:2)
Your attempts at irony are shooting in the wrong direction, as Microsoft is part of W3C and indeed has a big part in defining the CSS and related standards.
Re:Broken rendering (Score:2)
Don't worry - they've been carefully fixing up their CSS support just enough to break all those nice hacks everyone's been using to get their websites to work on IE, but not enough that you don't need them...
Re:Broken rendering (Score:2)
Gosh I wish I could mod you +5 Inane.
Re:Broken rendering (Score:2)
Re:Broken rendering (Score:2)
Re:Broken rendering (Score:2)
Even Safari, which passes the Acid test, still doesn't allow web developers to replace the goofy Aqua buttons on a site with standard ones.
The CSS spec specificially exempts form controls from having to follow style, so I'm not sure what that has to do with "standard valid CSS handling". It's also silly to say that it can't replace the Aqua buttons with "standard" ones--those buttons are standard, both in the browser and in the entire OS. What you really mean is that it doesn't allow you to replace th
Re:Broken rendering (Score:2)
Actually a lot has been done to improve CSS support in this release, and lack of Acid 2 compliance doesn't mean "it's same as old releases". This is too naive and biased view for me to even comment further on.
But you may notice everyone's favorite Firefox (which I also use) doesn't pass Acid 2 as well, the experimental branches in the code tree that do pass are just that - experimental, and not likely to happen before Firefox 3.0.
Re:Broken rendering (Score:2)
Personally, I find that this means that the proper rendering of the Acid test is somewhat subjective.
Supported OSs... (Score:1)
Supported Operating Systems: Windows 2000; Windows 95; Windows 98; Windows ME; Windows XP.
I guess there is hope for those that don't want to upgrade their Pentium/133 systems.
Re:Supported OSs... (Score:2)
Phishing scam protection - MY FOOT !!! (Score:5, Interesting)
No it does NOT prevent phishing scams, but actually IE actually makes various online hosting providers' anti-phishing filters useless. If someone hosts a text (yeah, .txt) file with HTML, *only* IE renders it as an HTML page.
One of my friends who was drowsy late night after cramming for exams, got phished!!! All fault of IE and partially his (being too drowsy!)... by this site : http://newphotosfamyli.bravehost.com/link2.txt [bravehost.com]
(Yeah, the site is still up after being reported to concerned people! If someone knows this fellow please punch him in the gut for me, thanks!).
More details and comparison of how Opera, Firefox and IE handle this phishing site are in my blog : http://blog.mritunjai.com/2006/04/23/gone-phishing / [mritunjai.com]
Re:Phishing scam protection - MY FOOT !!! (Score:4, Interesting)
Has anyone tried Konqueror on this site?
Re:Phishing scam protection - MY FOOT !!! (Score:2)
Renders it as text, not HTML. Mind you, it even renders *binary* files as text occasionally...
Re:Phishing scam protection - MY FOOT !!! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Phishing scam protection - MY FOOT !!! (Score:2)
Re:Phishing scam protection - MY FOOT !!! (Score:2)
FILE A BUG REPORT !! Violation of standards is *not* a good thing and this is a clear cut baked and dried example of where it causes real agony to users who get trapped!
Side note: For unknown sites, I use Opera (near perfect record with security), and Firefox. Opera is better because most crap sites won't work with i
Re:Phishing scam protection - MY FOOT !!! (Score:2, Interesting)
Everyone I know has been told about the inherent safety of firefox, but most people didn't know that at one point, firefox had a bug that allowed you to script to other tabs.
Browsers are only safe until you find the next bug. IE has plenty, but Firefox, Safari, Opera et al. are not completely safe. There are just fewer hackers trying to prove that they aren't.
I'm still not sure why IE is being criticiz
Re:Phishing scam protection - MY FOOT !!! (Score:2)
The point in the case is that if someboy wants to share source of some page, and lets say save it as text file, he should be allowed to do so, as by nature and by public belief plain text files MUST NOT cause any damage. It is plain content and should be redistributable without restrictions! If we go along on that path of banning and filtering text files it would be a sad day of extremem censorship some time in future...
Another point, if extension/
Content type, file extensions, MSIE (Score:2)
FYI and FWIW, the thing that HTTP User Agents are *supposed* to look at is the Content-Type header. URLs say nothing about "files" or "extensions"; the fact that a URL ends in a period followed by three characters should not be considered significant. Sure, Apache and IIS use files and directories, but there isn't anything in the specs about that.
The link you posted comes up with "text/plain" in the header, so it should be treated as text. (If
Re:Phishing scam protection - MY FOOT !!! (Score:2)
As the parent poster says, this is a long standing problem with IE, and it should be on the list of things that MS code monkeys shoul
Scott Adams Style (Score:5, Funny)
"Please hold while I disconnect, erm, redirect you to the appropriate expert. Sucker!"
No doubt (Score:2, Funny)
That it's a significant improvement to IE 6. What I don't quite get is why it should be a significant improvement to the competition; specifically Opera & Firefox.
In another news... (Score:2, Funny)
Why dont they depreciate some of their bloat in IE (Score:2, Interesting)
Will they help me get it running under wine? (Score:1, Funny)
Excellent! (Score:2)
Why only -2- other countries?!? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Who wants an Internet phone toy that only manages to connect you
to TWO other countries (with no choice of which ones), anyway?!?
Skype is -my- friend, here!
Not perfect, but it does all that I want done in the VoIP dep't.
What about you? Do you think MS will ever catch-up in VoIP?
Still no :before, no application/xhtml+xml (Score:4, Informative)
It seems that they're really pulling off the "still no CSS" stunt. Too bad. Also, IE7 still tries to download properly served XHTML. What a failure.
Phone support in IE5? (Score:2)
Sure, this "phone support" was expensive, since I got a $89.22 phone bill for a three-minute call to Bulgaria a month later, but all in all everyone had a great time.
I tried the IE phone (Score:2)
I kept hearing blue screams of death.
Re:I tried the IE phone (Score:2)
sorry.. wrong joke then.
Why not an independently installed program? (Score:2)
Who wants to try a beta test program that completely wipes (or better: hides) the stable version?
How are we supposed to check websites, modify them to work on MSIE 7, and still test for compatability with MSIE 6?
It is not like it is completely impossible. You can quite easily install a
Freudian Frasing? (Score:2)
Remember, as MicroSoft says, "the software should not be used in mission-critical environments".
Re:Acid 2 & install problems. (Score:1)
Ummm
"Duh" quotient is up on
Re:Acid 2 & install problems. (Score:2)
Errr, right, but I've used loads of BETA SOFTWARE and never had to uninstall the previous beta before installing the new version, I just went right ahead & installed it over the previous version.
What makes IE 7 special? It's not just because it's BETA SOFTWARE (I presume the capitalizion is important for you for some reason)
Surely MS's install / uninstall software is mature enough by now - even if IE 7 is BETA SOFTWARE.
Re:Acid 2 & install problems. (Score:5, Informative)
I've been running beta2 for months now and it actually seems to work better than the previous versions by a long shot. Not nearly as many problems with loading content that has traditionally given IE problems.
The tabbed browsing has a few advantages over firefox's and a few features are yet missing that firefox's tabbed browsing had from it's earliest incarnation. Of course beta 1 of firefox was based off of a heavily tested and proven codebase, and much of IE7 has been a complete rewrite.
It would be nice to right click and "open in new tab" now and then, a feature that is glaringly absent. However I do like the new layout, it took me a while to get used to the fact that the standard button layout was gone, and there was nothing I could do about it, but once I got used to it, it worked well, probably more efficient than my previous surfing experiences. However, there should be an option to use the standard web controls that people have used since the stone age of the world wide web, as my wife, being a neophyte, hates it, and refuses to get used to it. And she cant use firefox on her web applications her work provides because firefox doesn't like cold fusion, so she sort of has to. It would be nice if she could use the familiar interface.
It also seems to load pages much faster than previous versions of IE, and dare I say it *gasp* firefox. One of the first things I tested, out of curiosity. Of course these tests were not scientifically conducted, and results can changed based on connection, and host bandwidth, client bandwidth, etc. etc. but it's competetive in that area.
Prior to downloading the beta, I was getting sick of firefox, and hadn't been having a very good experience with it for a while. Probably because of an extension I loaded or something else completely unrelated to the sacred browser itself, but it seemed to be a resource hog. I have heard there were fixes, and I applied them, but my browsing experience continued to suck. And I was considering buying opera. I figured I'd try ie7 before I went that route since I was considering a change anyway, and so far, nothing has been bad enough to chase me off. I'll continue testing it. However I'll probably still buy opera if they don't add a few features and refine a few they don't already have.
And to the guys at MS, why not make it acid2 compliant? While your at the drawing board, might as well just make the necessary adjustments. One less thing to be critisized over at least, and I doubt it would require huge amounts of sweeping changes.
Re:Acid 2 & install problems. (Score:2, Interesting)
You're right. It wasn't scientifically conducted, even if you ignore the variables of your net connection. Not knowing exactly what you were testing with Firefox, etc., and then comparing it to a new install of another browser is outside of common sense.
However, the fact that you were hones
Re:Acid 2 & install problems. (Score:2)
Really? Safari on the Mac has that feature.
Oh, that's right. Windows only uses one mouse button, unlike Macs. Silly me!
Re:Acid 2 & install problems. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Acid 2 & install problems. (Score:2, Informative)
ColdFusion is a web programming language just like ASP, JSP, PHP, etc. It produces HTML just like any other language. There is no such a thing as a web browser that "doesn't like" an application programming language - the browser never sees the language, it sees the resultant HTML.
I am the Web Services Manager for Lightyear - http://www.lightyear.net/ [lightyear.net] - all code ColdFusion, all
Re:Acid 2 & install problems. (Score:4, Insightful)
Depends what you mean by recently.
this blog [blogspot.com] says the issue you're complaining about was fixed over a year ago
Re:Acid 2 & install problems. (Score:2)
Since it was fixed in 1.0.3, which came out not long after 1.0 (a hair over 5 months), then you're complaining about it being busted in beta versions as well? Are you serious?
Yes, it should've been fixed in 1.0 release, but that doesn't make your statement any less silly.
Re:Acid 2 & install problems. (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Does "phone support" mean (Score:2)