FEATURED VIDEO

Sponsored By:
SLIDE SHOWS
Our list of the most innovative executives of the year spotlights the people that are pushing the envelope with new products and channel programs to bring solution providers to new heights.
Find out which executives made the grade and held their own, despite the great IT downturn of 2009.
Most everyone loves Thanksgiving turkeys. But IT industry turkeys? Not so much. We look at 10 examples of 'turkeys' that have disappointed the tech industry this year.
INSIDE CHANNELWEB
BLOGS
The Channel Wire
January 26, 2009
Internet Explorer 8 is essentially finished, but Microsoft says it wants to give testers a chance to kick the tires on an IE8 release candidate to ensure that no major glitches end up in the final version.

In a Monday blog post, Internet Explorer General Manager Dean Hachamovitch announced the launch of IE8 Release Candidate 1 and said it incorporates user feedback Microsoft has gathered since launching IE8 Beta 2 last August.

The result is better reliability, performance and compatibility, according to Hachamovitch. "The IE8 product is effectively complete and done," he wrote.

The growing scourge of "clickjacking," a tactic in which attackers sneak malicious code invisibly into the background of legitimate Web sites to harvest confidential data to gain control over users' PCs, is a main focus of IE8. Microsoft has worked closely with the security community to ensure that IE8 can detect this type of attack, Hachamovitch said.

"Sites can now protect themselves and their users from clickjacking attacks 'out of the box,' without impacting compatibility or requiring browser add-ons," Hachamovitch wrote.

IE8 RC1 works with Windows Vista, XP and Server, but not with the Windows 7 beta, the users of which will get an updated IE8 with the next update of Windows 7, Hachamovitch wrote.

Posted by Kevin McLaughlin at 6:10 PM
ADVERTISEMENT




CHANNEL SERVICES >>