Microsoft
Corp. is working on a new Web browser to replace its long-standing
Internet Explorer, a report says. The successor to Internet Explorer
reportedly will be so radically different, it will stand alongside the
latest version (IE11) on Windows 10.
Internet Explorer has seen its dominant share of the
browser market challenged by alternatives like Google Chrome and Mozilla
Firefox, which have gained in popularity in the last decade. The two
feature rapid update cycles, often implementing security fixes and new
features more quickly than Microsoft, and have a reputation for being
faster and more secure.
Microsoft plans to implement a rapid update cycle for its
new browser, code named Spartan, and ditch some but not most of the
bogged-down legacy software that runs Internet Explorer, ZDNet reported.
For instance, the report said Microsoft will avoid the WebKit standard
Apple uses for Safari, a variation of which is used by Chrome. It said
Spartan will feature browser extensions, a popular feature that allows
users to add-on specific features and functions found on Chrome and
Firefox.
There is no confirmation Microsoft will unveil the new
browser, which will reportedly be offered on both mobile and desktop,
during its Jan. 21 Windows 10 event. The Spartan browser will still run
Microsoft’s Bing search engine, but be more “lightweight,” ZDNet said.
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