Give Mac Explorer to the People? 242
An anonymous reader writes "In an article on the BBC News site, Bill Thompson suggests that Microsoft release the source for IE:Mac to the world so that others can continue to develop the product. While this may be a pleasant fiction, Microsoft does seem to be making an effort to change their image. Could we see more OSS interaction from the software giant in the near future?"
Or not? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Or not? (Score:4, Insightful)
I wouldn't touch it with yours (Score:3, Insightful)
The reason why some aren't too keen on thier shared source license.
Re:I wouldn't touch it with yours (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Or not? (Score:2)
Re:Or not? (Score:2)
Any way in the case of Windows, many of the explorer functions and such use the same libraries as IE uses. they have become so intertwined that it is nearly impossible to extricate IE froma a system and still have a functional OS.
-nB
Re:Or not? (Score:2)
Re:Or not? (Score:3, Interesting)
-nB
Re:Or not? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Or not? (Score:2)
Re:Or not? (Score:5, Insightful)
It is like a program with all the problems and stability issues of IE 5 (sans Active X because there is not Active X for the mac) with none of its benefits that you would get on a PC version. Hell... Most of the pages rendered nothing like their windows counterpart. The program was made from scratch using a totally different team not related to the IE team for the PC.
As soon as a better alternative came out (Safari) I dumped IE.
May it burn in hell and let us not metion it ever again.
I've never used it, but.. (Score:2)
Re:I've never used it, but.. (Score:2)
Golgamathea, for those who don't know... (Score:2)
Re:Or not? (Score:2)
The Netscape 7 series was a much better browser for the Mac (Specifically Classic).
It had proper CSS support, popup blocking, and the mail client didn't suck as well.
There are much bettter choices available for OSX.
Outlook Express that was bundled with IE couldn't open hyperlinks.
I'm just glad that I don't have to code to it anymore.
Re:Or not? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Or not? (Score:2)
I agree. This is like the Soviet Union saying "Okay, we give up on this communist dictatorship thing. How about a capitalist democracy for a change?" and the USA stepping in and helping them stay communist. In a cold war, when your opponent bows out, you do not force him back into the ring.
Agreed (Score:2)
Re:Or not? (Score:2)
Have you ever tried running FireFox on a 1Ghz eMac with 768 megs of memory? Let me tell you, it is no speed demon either. FireFox runs better on my old pc with an AMD AthlonXP 1600 with 512 megs than the eMac...
I haven't found Safari to run fast either. Maybe on a G5, I guess.
Re:Or not? (Score:2)
Dude, Mac IE rocked (Score:3, Informative)
Unfortunately, aside for some security updates, Microsoft more or less stopped development after their half ass OS X port. IE 5 was a GREAT web dev tool when it was good. It significantly limited (not eliminated) my need to run over to a networked PC to
ActiveX on Mac (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, ActiveX does run just fine on the Mac, and has for a long time. I used it in 1996 to develop a plug-in system for a visual programming language called Bounce, and Mac Common Lisp [donhopkins.com]). Metrowerks actually modified their C++ compiler to support it (adding a _comobject magic class that you can inherit from to get the vtable pointers formatted in the right place so multiple inheritance and QueryInterface worked together properly). Microsoft used it to port IE to the Mac, and paid Metrowerks to make the
Other Suggestions (Score:5, Funny)
Other Suggestions:
China should withdraw from Tibet and allow the Tibetans to construct a Disneyland in Lhasa, since Tibet is already becoming little more than a tourist trap.
Bush should withdraw from Iraq and let the war be carried out by our powerful allies from Togo and Lithuania.
The Road Runner should let the Coyote have him for dinner.
They should develop a snow ball in hell that would survive for an extended period of time.
Etc.
Re:Other Suggestions (Score:3, Funny)
You forgot Poland!
Already dead. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Already dead. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Already dead. (Score:2)
Re:Already dead. (Score:2)
Re:Or not? (Score:2, Funny)
I think Mac IE is already dead which is the only reasons M$ would allow its source to be Open. To illustrate this picture the situation similar to "the viewing" of the body before it's burial.
You don't wanna do that! (Score:5, Insightful)
MOD PARENT DOWN (Score:2, Informative)
MOD PARENT DOWN OR FUNNY (Score:2)
Either way, the Informative mod is wrong.
Re:You don't wanna do that! (Score:2)
Any justification?. As someone who uses Safari on the Mac and Firefox on PCs I would rather lose Firefox than Safari. The only reason I find to use Firefox on the Mac is for occasional web page editing sessions where Chris Pederick's web developer plugin is essential.
Re:You don't wanna do that! (Score:2)
Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
While it may be a nice pseudo-political irony to have IE Mac go open-source, it is an old, outdated browser that was rendered unnecessary long ago in every sense of the word.
Re:Why? (Score:4, Insightful)
The stated reason in TFA is to allow use of IE-only sites. But of course it would be a lot simpler to fake and/or emulate IE's responses to sneak in; and to bitch loudly to the sites. A forked IE-Mac is unlikely to stay compatible with the latest Windows version, making it useless in short order for any purpose.
Re:Why? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why? (Score:3, Interesting)
That's easy enough for you to say, but some of us are required to use IE-only sites to do our jobs. I can't even fill out my timesheet without loading an IE-only site and our help desk system (Remedy) requires IE on Windows the way they have it setup. Yes, my company has drank the MS Kool-Aid and is 100% devoted to Microsoft only solutions, but the
Re:Why? (Score:2)
And that'd be a terrific and well-thought-out reason, except that IE5Mac is such a radically different beast from IE6.0 in terms of rendering and javascript support. While it may make sense for a company to choose one browser to support for their internal t
Re:Why? (Score:2)
I didn't say I use IE 5.x on a Mac.. it doesn't work with my company's apps either. I'm just saying that a true IE-compatible browser would be incredibly useful on alternative platforms. Unfortunately that requires implementing ActiveX and is a security nightmare. I guess the rest of us will just stick to running IE in Virtual PC or VMWare to get to corporate apps or use a Terminal Server.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Why? (Score:2)
I've been longing for over a year for an
Re:Why? (Score:3, Insightful)
As long as ye olde IE:Mac is on there, people who only know Windows will sit down in front of our Macs, see the bl
Re:Why? (Score:3, Insightful)
Exactly, Most sites that require IE for reasons other than a little bit of bad HTML usually only work on IE for Windows. If they happen to let IE for Mac in it is probably because they couldn't be arsed to test the site in IE for Mac (or don't even know Macs exist!) and forgot to block it. When IE for Mac get to the part that
Re:Why? (Score:3, Interesting)
However, I think, the bigger question is why do these website owners completely disregard the security architecture and Open Standards by using technology that is unsafe and proprietary.
The most common answer to this question is: It is easier to develope websites that are only supported in IE i.e. Active X enabled etc. And I am quilty of that as well.
So my proposal is: Instead of wasting t
Re:Why? (Score:4, Informative)
So while you may argue the need to access ActiveX sites as justification for using IE on Windows, that doesn't hold true for Mac IE.
HP scanners .. (Score:2)
A weird hack.
MS should not let their stuff die (Score:2)
I don't know if they should open it or not, but allowing it to die is a very bad idea and causes damage to Microsoft.
It doesn't matter that no one would want to use a new Mac MSIE. Every time any proprietary application is orphaned or goes too long without maintainence, it sends a message to the world that it is foolish to allow oneself to become dependent on proprietary software. "Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me."
And of all proprietary apps, that it w
Well some of the middleware code might be useful.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Well some of the middleware code might be usefu (Score:5, Interesting)
There are none. IE for the Mac was built from scratch not using a single line of IE Windows code by a different team of developers who most likley didn't have any formal communication with the IE for windows team.
Re:Well some of the middleware code might be usefu (Score:4, Informative)
Go look at the project history, developer statements, or thousands of different web design sites that talk about this. The two browsers render quite differently, in that IE for Mac tended to be much more standards compliant, and did not implement the IE for Windows specific behaviors.
Re:Well some of the middleware code might be usefu (Score:2)
Not gonna happen. (Score:5, Insightful)
Not gonna happen. Not in my lifetime anyway.
Re:Not gonna happen. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Not gonna happen. (Score:3, Informative)
5. Intellectual property concerns. In its current state the code may contain code which is subject to patents owned by Microsoft or in turn licensed from another company. The effort to purge the code of such dependencies for public release might not be worth their effort.
free "developers... developers... developers"... (Score:5, Insightful)
After all from what I understand, Microsoft is looking at exploiting the open source model of development for getting free developers. I very much doubt they would go down a path where they transfer the entire copyright of the codebase to a non-profit organization (like Netscape/AOL and Mozilla Foundation).
Then again, with Safari working very decently - who needs IE on Mac ?
I can almost picture Steve Ballmer - "developersComment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Short Answer : No Way. (Score:3, Insightful)
Now it might be that the core is compeltly different from a system to the next. Then I will probably be the first to yell "what the hell were they thinking ???".
Re:Short Answer : No Way. (Score:2, Insightful)
They were thinking that they didn't need to have a mac version with the same legacy cruft as the windows version and it ended up better than the windows versions at the time. But that is in the past now.
What is more important when looking at the about window of MSIE for mac is you see how many other copyrights and patents and various things that are owned by other people licensed to Microsoft are in MSIE for mac.
MS has han
Oh please, god, no! (Score:5, Insightful)
Let it die, let it die already!
Yes, Mac IE was fairly advanced for its time, but the quicker it disappears from the face of the planet, the better! All the techniques on which modern web design rely that work reliably in all the major browsers have major issues in Mac IE. Floats and clear in particular - these just require such awful hackery when Mac IE specifically needs to be supported... it's worse than IE 5 and Netscape 4 combined! (Okay, so that might be a slight hyperbole.) ;P
Yes, it's very understandable that the behaviours of these properties weren't well defined back then, and compared to the Win IE of its time, Tantek and team did a superb job with this browser... but that was years ago. It's dead now, and needs to be forgotten as quickly as possible!
Re:Oh please, god, no! (Score:2, Insightful)
IE5.x on the Mac *does* have a different engine to its Windows counterpart. In some ways better (it supports PNG alpha and did a better job of CSS back in the day) and in some ways worse. However, for a few years now it has been out of date and other browsers (even IE on windows) have long surpassed it.
Several better and open-source browsers / HTML rendering engines exist and I really can't imagine there would be any fancy stuff in the code worth salvaging (no, there is no mapping of windows c
Doesn't really make sense, does it? (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm no techical wizard, but the article really doesn't make a whole lot of sense, does it? As far as I know, the rendering engine is totally different from Mac to Windows. It isn't as though they're using the MSHTML dll. Hell, doesn't Safari use WebCore for display and WebKit for their plugin architecture? (again, I'm not really up on this, so feel free to correct)
IE5 for OS9 was a fairly nice piece of software, but the OSX version was always ghastly. If the rendering engine is passé too, then ... why release the code? I'd suggest the effort is better spent getting Microsoft to release a standards-compliant "browser" with be done with this particular era in the history of the internet.
Microsoft is trying to change their image (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, they do seem to be making that effort, and it does appear to be working on the surface. However, beneath the surface, the same Microsoft is still in business.
Unless Gates and Ballmer relinquish the throne, the real Microsoft (not the Microsoft that the image-makers paint for us) will not, and can not, change.
Image (Score:4, Interesting)
And that's about all; Microsoft is all about marketing. They can change their image by putting millions of dollars into ad campaigns, without having to change the way they run their monopoly. It is very expensive from a marketing perspective to change the opinion of anyone that has caught on to what they are really doing behind the scenes with all their OEM contracts and extending of protocols -- so they are only interested in beguiling ignorant people and management-types.
Statements like this that put an arguably misplaced faith in giant multinational monopolies are nothing short of propaganda and free marketing for Microsoft.
Potential copyright issues here (Score:5, Interesting)
I dunno, but I'm betting that MS couldn't easily release IE as OSS even if they were so inclined.
Re:Potential copyright issues here (Score:2)
That's why I don't think they'd ever release the code for some of their "legacy" applications -- too many skeletons in the closet.
MSN explorer (Score:3, Informative)
Re:MSN explorer (Score:3, Informative)
Edit: Edit: stupid slowdown cowboy message
Why would you want to....? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Why would you want to....? (Score:4, Informative)
The fact that Entourage supports Exchange environments is another big telling factor. The art and scientific users in your company can use their Macs to check their Exchange mail just as if they were using Outlook.
Re:Why would you want to....? (Score:2)
damn! (Score:4, Funny)
Can't and won't happen (Score:3, Informative)
A lot of that technology is either licensed from other sources, regional and is under local governmental control, or is closed source because it is under court order because of past law suits. In other words much of Internet Explorer isn't a Microsoft product; it would a nightmare for Microsoft to make it such.
IN NAME ONLY (Score:2, Informative)
Who would want IE on the Mac? (Score:3, Interesting)
However, without that exception I can't see why anyone would want IE on OS X. Maybe for compatibility with a web application that only works with IE?? I installed IE on my Mac when I got it a year ago, and I don't think I've ever opened it. Firefox is capable of handing most sites now. Even "IE Only" sites at least render OK.
Only if you want it hacked to all hell... (Score:2, Interesting)
Besides, it would take months for any initiative to start and release a "patch" to fix said new holes.
Um, no. Just no. (Score:5, Insightful)
Second, the code isn't really worth anything at this point. The rendering engine in Mac IE has nothing to do with the rendering engine in Win IE and it's easily the slowest rendering engine out there (well, it's definitely a ton slower than Moz, IE Win, KHTML. .
Third, the author says that his reason for wanting Mac IE is for some random website that will require it in the future. Unfortunately, while a website may require IE, it won't work with IE Mac. IE Mac has nothing to do with IE Win. It can't run ActiveX. It doesn't render things similarly. If a website requires IE, Mac IE users are out of luck.
Fourth, I don't think anyone would be impressed by releasing the source for an application that is so dead. Releasing the source for Win IE would be amazing - the community could clean up security holes, improve standards compliance, etc. and make IE a better browser. Mac IE, on the other hand, is long gone. It's just too hopeless to salvage anything useful. It would be like Microsoft open-sourcing Internet Explorer 1.0 - just too old to make anyone care at this point.
Mac IE is dead. It's old. There's nothing useful there and open-sourcing it wouldn't help the Mac community or the open-source community. It wouldn't give any insight into the things that make websites IE-only since IE-only websites don't work with Mac IE. This article is just bad.
MS and OSS? (Score:3, Funny)
Yes - right after the FAA give type approval for flying pigs.
Only one reason to do this... (Score:3, Insightful)
2) Project goes no where, produces no new code, no bug fixes, because the code is open, hackers find holes and hack IE Mac...
3) MS Starts FUD campaign about how open source is less secure, doesn't produce bug fixes fast, and doesn't add new features!
Re:Only one reason to do this... (Score:2)
Wrong! Anyone may correct the statement via the template below:
_______________ is less secure, doesn't produce bug fixes fast, and doesn't add new features!
Oh, look Daddy! (Score:2)
Run the Win32 version of IE? (Score:2, Funny)
Regular slashdot readers woule be aware that the 'red box' dream of rhapsody is to some degree being realised in the form of Darwine [opendarwin.org], itself based on wine [winehq.org]
Don't hold your breath relying on Microsoft to be a good Mac community member and open sourcing this 'legacy' browser. If true IE compatibility is required then at least in theory it is possible to run the real thing under wine in OS X.
The advan
Re: (Score:2)
EU Regulators (Score:2)
Actually, he knows what he wants and has asked for exactly what the EU anti-trust commission wants. The want M$ to publish useful documentation for interacting with their garbage. If they won't, fine they will pay millions of dollars a day. All this commentator wants is for his Mac to be able to work. For some reason, he thinks M$ will help him and others make that happen.
M$ is going to sink in their greedy shit. More pe
New Year Wishlist (Score:3, Insightful)
OTOH, it's possible that Micrisoft might start to become a little more open. They might decide to do so by making the best of what they regard as a bad job, for example opening up their server protocols with a song and dance about open saucery because they are in heavy trouble with the EU over the matter anyway. Or they might decide to make their browser a little more flexible, along the lines of Firefox extensions, etc.
But it is easy to overlook that opening up anything could be fairly traumatic for Microsoft. It's not just the money, it's the whole philosophy of the company that would feel threatened. Microsoft is built on the notion that every single thing, right down to the precise shade of the last pixel, must be absolutely determined and controlled, and then parcelled out dollar by dollar. Only this, the theory must go, guarantees an acceptable "user experience" that can be replicated 100 per cent on any desktop anywhere in the world.
Perhaps there are 500 business-school tomes which back up the idea. If so, they are history now. In many ways, a bold move Bill Gates could make in 2006 would be to accept that the philsosphy which built Microsoft may be becoming incapable of sustaining it, step back and let someone else take a crack. And that could really wrong-foot Google et al, too.
and the purpose is ... ? (Score:2)
with Firefox/Mozilla, Safari, and Opera, to name a few, how many more web browers do we need?
Common Genetic Basis (was:and the purpose is ... ? (Score:2)
Researchers suspect that these people share a common genetic mutation with the people who wish to develop BeOS and OS/2. Known as the "uber underdog gene", its sufferers appear normal until they stumble upon a lost cause. Once even a trivial amount of emotional investment is made in the lost cause -- typically before they realize it is lost -- the sufferers are unable to move on.
The developers of FreeBSD (it's dead, I heard) are
Re:and the purpose is ... ? (Score:2)
Phoning-It-In (Score:2)
So, for all you folks that keeping asking, "Why?" There is no Why.
IE5/Mac was a great browser (Score:2, Insightful)
Problem: IE/Mac is not very compatible with IE (Score:4, Insightful)
And at the time IE for the Mac came out, it was interesting. I, for one, found it to be much better than Netscape in numerous ways. And at the time, the Mac business unit was trumpeting how compatible it was with Web standards.
Unfortunately, it was. And therefore is not particularly "bug-compatible" with IE for Windows.
I'm very pragmatic about browsers. I don't care about purity, I just want to get my web purchases processed. Safari is very good. In fact, my experience so far is that it is very, very rare to find sites that a) do not work with Safari that b) do work with IE for the Mac. Specifically:
a) If a site claims specifically that it "requires IE 5 or higher," it usually does not work with IE 5.2 for the Mac.
b) If a site claims to require a specific browsers and any browser other than IE is on the list, it usually will work with Safari.
c) If a site, for whatever reason, does not work with Safari, it is more likely to work with Firefox for the Mac than it is to work with IE 5.2 for the Mac.
So... unfortunately... I think this is a non-issue.
If IE for the Mac were a high-fidelity reproduction of vintage-2000 IE for Windows, it would be nice if someone had the source and tried to maintain it. As it is, I don't think there's any good reason to care.
By the way: I found out the hard way that although IE for the Mac and for Windows both have a very useful "web archive" feature, the archive files themselves are in utterly different and incompatible formats, with no known conversion tool between them.
Aaaaaahahahahahahahaha! (Score:2)
Mactel (Score:2)
As a Mac user..... (Score:2)
NO!! (Score:2)
Web development for sites with Mac visitors is dramatically hindered by this crappy browser. 80% of the hacks required are due to failings in IE 5 for Mac, the other 20% are for IE 6 for Windows.
No way it could be open sourced. (Score:2)
- Distributed under a licensing agreement with Spyglass, Inc.
- Contains security software licensed from RSA Data Security Inc.
- Portions of this software are based in part on the work of the Independent JPEG Group.
- Multimedia software components, including Indeo(R); video, Indeo(R) audio, and Web Design Effects are provided by Inte
No Vulgar Raymondisms: Users don't review code. (Score:5, Insightful)
Please stop spreading the Vulgar Raymondism [softpanorama.org] that the Firefox code is read by millions of users. Have you read it yourself? I'll bet not! Most users and even programmers DO NOT read source code. You only hurt the open source / free software movement when you dump out steaming piles of horse shit like that. There are enough valid reasons to use open source / free software like Firefox, that you don't need to lie about it.
-Don
Re:OS X is already open source, you idiot. (Score:3, Informative)
Will We? (Score:3, Funny)
IE, pining for the fjords? Not bloody likely. (Score:2)
There is no secret deal to kill MSIE on the Mac.
Well, not such that involves anyone at Apple, anyway. There certainly is no conspiracy between Apple and Microsoft to kill MSIE on the Mac. It's dead already. It was killed by Microsoft shortly after it shipped. (In the interest of Faux Fairness and Balance I note that IE on Windows was apparently killed shortly thereafter.)
IE fell flat on its back the moment I got 'im 'ome.
'IE's n