IE8 arrives, Google Street Views comes to the UK
Microsoft have announced that the 8th iteration of their Internet Explorer browser will be out of beta and officially released today at noon EST – that’s 4pm for us GMT residents.
Being an early Windows 7 beta adopter, I’ve been using IE8 beta for a few months now and have only really come to the conclusion that it is better – just – than IE7. Alex posted about the IE8 beta over a year ago now, and proclaimed then that “IE8 is quite a handsome beast but it won’t be replacing Firefox or Opera in our hearts (or on our desktops) anytime soon”. In this case, I concur absolutely here – it most certainly is not my browser of choice – but since IE still has the global browser market share (well, besides Antarctica), IE updates are still of great importance to us.
Microsoft have had the unenviable task of trying to please everybody: IE8 is compliant with current web standards, but needs to revert to an IE7 ‘compatibility mode’ in order to render sites correctly that were designed with previous versions of Internet Explorer in mind. It’s a novel idea for Microsoft to be embracing backwards compatibility, something for which they have been maligned as recently as office 2007 introducing the new XML file formats (.docx, .xlsx, .pptx etc.), which are completely incompatible with previous versions until Office 2003 and older users download a compatibility pack.
Google Street Views – one of my preferred methods of wasting far too much time on the internet – is starting to cover more than just America. The Googlemobile is really starting to rack up the miles – areas of the UK, France and Japan are starting to turn that satisfying shade of blue which tells you that you can zoom straight on down. Sadly, Brighton isn’t on the map yet, but we’ll be sure to wave if we see the Googlemobile coming around the corner.
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Up until now Street Views coverage has been limited to America – which is mapped from coast to coast – as well as Australia and New Zealand. When it comes to online map solutions, it’s hard to see how anybody else is going to get close to what has been achieved so far with Google Maps.




