![]() Like cockroaches or Tim Tebow's NFL career, Microsoft's Internet Explorer just won't die. Microsoft ( ) made it official this week that the standard web browser to ship with will not be Internet Explorer (sigh of relief). It will not only have a new name, it will be a completely different browser, designed from scratch (yay!). Get help with your questions about using Internet Explorer and upgrading to the latest version with our how-to articles, and support content. It will even come with neat new features, including letting you write directly on webpages from your touchscreen, making sites more readable, and saving sites for offline reading (cool!). But Internet Explorer will be sticking around. (Wait, what?!) Yup. Microsoft's new browser (currently codenamed ) will be built on a different software platform from IE, so it won't be backwards-compatible. That means Microsoft will continue to ship IE with Windows to ensure that corporate apps keep functioning properly. 'We recognize some enterprises have legacy websites that use older technologies designed only for Internet Explorer,' said Jason Weber, Microsoft's Internet Explorer program manager, in a. 'For these users, Internet Explorer will also be available on Windows 10.' In other words, don't get mad at Microsoft. Blame your IT department for building apps in Internet Explorer. And South Korea (which passed a law in 1999 requiring that banks and retailers use digital certificates -- created by Microsoft, and available exclusively on Internet Explorer).
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![]() Should I remove SafeIP by SafeIP,? Hide your IP address and protect your online identity with SafeIP. Hide your real IP address SafeIP enables you to hide your real IP address by routing your Internet connection through one of several international proxy servers. The program offers proxy servers based in the US, UK, Germany, Poland and France. Choosing an IP location from a different country may slow down your connection speed but may allow you to access sites that block access from your own country. SafeIP also offers some additional features that allow you to block cookies, ads and known malware sites, as well as a DNS privacy option that will route your DNS request through private DNS servers. The program does a good job at faking your IP address, however the ad blocking feature only worked sporadically and using Private DNS slowed down web browsing significantly during our test. |
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