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Preston Gralla's picture
Preston Gralla

Seeing Through Windows

Five things you'll love (or hate) about IE8

Wondering what you'll love (or hate) about IE8? I've put the beta through its paces, and I've got the goods for you. I've found some nifty new features, and one that spells annoyance. Read on for details and screenshots.

WebSlices

Think of this feature as RSS feeds on steroids. As with an RSS feed, you subscribe to changing content from a Web page. But WebSlices are graphically richer, and as you can see in the screenshot below, you can view them directly from the newly configured Favorites bar (previously called the Links bar), by clicking them. When you click one, the WebSlice drops down. You can click through to go to the Web page that houses the slice, or simply view it in the drop-down. This is a nifty feature, but only useful if Web developers place WebSlices on their pages. At the moment, there aren't many WebSlices out there. So it's hard to know whether developers will create them, and this will become a truly useful feature, or instead will join the long list of good ideas had a quick exit to the graveyard.

IE8 WebSlice
WebSlices, by the way, bear a striking resemblance to an ill-conceived feature Microsoft introduced way back in 1997 in IE4-- Active Desktop. For details, check out my blog IE8's new WebSlices feature: Welcome to 1997.

New Favorites bar

As I mentioned above, the Links bar has been renamed the Favorites bar, and been given a few new features. You can put WebSlices and RSS feeds here as well as links. Microsoft also says that you can include links to documents on your hard disk, but I haven't tried that out yet…or figured out yet how to do it. I'm not a big fan of the new Favorites bar; I always thought that the Links bar took away real estate and didn't offer many new features, and the new Favorites bar seems like more of the same.

Activities

This feature powers up the Internet Explorer right-click menu. Hover your mouse over an item, or highlight the item, and right-click and a list of actions appear, such as mapping the highlighted term, translating it, defining it, and so on. Depending on the choice you make, you may see a preview screen of your action right on the Web page, such as displaying a small map, as you see below. You can then click through to the larger map.

IE8 Activities

Crash recovery

Finally, Internet Explorer can do what Firefox has been able to do with add-ins for a very long time --- recover from crashes, and then restore the session or tab that crashed. So after IE8 crashes, or an individual tab crashes, you'll have the option of restoring it, as you can see below.

IE8 crash screen

Easier-to-identify domains

Some URLs are so long and complex that it can be tough to immediately decipher which domain you're currently visiting. In IE8, in the address bar, only the domain (for example, computerworld.com) is black; everything else is in gray. That way, you can see immediately where you are. Check it out, below.

IE8 domain name

By the way, if you're testing out IE8 for yourself, you might want to check my previous blogs about IE8, one which detailed how IE8 hosed my system, and the other about how I fixed it. Also, I'll be posting a fuller review of IE8 on Computerworld soon, so check for that soon.

If you'd like to see a head-to-head review of IE8 versus Firefox 3, read Battle of the betas: Firefox 3 beats IE.

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What People Are Saying

Downloads

Hi all
Yep, proxy is fine since we might load data from nearly everywhere, so we cannot ask everyone to add a crossdomain.xml to their serverx. This solution is ok, at least I now have one that will work. But still I would be interested how the pure Actionscript solution might look like. I believe it is possible to copy the loader object somehow. I just dont know how yet.

Some really cool

Some really cool stuff in there… some so cool that I might even want to use ie8 but unless they make a mac version (yeah right) I won’t be leaving Safari any time soon. I long for the day where I can curse the other browsers for not implementing a cool feature that I want to code into my sites. I’m tired of cursing IE. Pretty much any time IE comes out of my mouth, a dollar goes into the profanity jar.

Search favorites

Is there an EASY way to search your Favorites in IE8 without having to install Desktop Search?

WebSlices, a new lock-in

So much for Microsoft embracing standards and seeing a new light. WebSlices will do just fine to keep the web off-balance and to keep the Microsoft faithful from going the right way so everyone can use the web equally well.

I suppose this all makes sense if you're losing browser share, even if it's only a trickle.

Rip off of Firefox 3...

Rip off of Firefox 3...

IE8 Downloads

One of the best parts of Firefox is the way it begins downloading a file as you waste time navigating to the spot on your hard drive you want to save it. Often times the file is downloaded by the time you've chosen where to put it. Firefox has a great download manager and I am amazed that Microsoft has yet seen this feature as not worthy of adopting.

Abt IE8

Its not new ...as we already had this future in firefox ages ago...

IE Downloads

Actually Jason, you are wrong there. IE has had that feature in place for a long time.

When you start a download, it will start placing it in the temporary files (it's cache), even before you have had time to decide where to put it.

It has happened to me on many occasions that by the time I have navigated to the spot I want, the file has allready been downloaded, and once you select the final destination, it just copies it over, leaving a copy in the tempory cache.

Not So

Anon said, "When you start a download, it will start placing it in the temporary files (it's cache), even before you have had time to decide where to put it."

That is not correct. MS has a cache -that is true, but it doesn't actually use it until you tell it where you want to save the file. The first comment was correct.

Sorry... try again

No, the first comment was wrong. IE DOES start downloading the file before you've selected where to put it (even though the progress bar doesn't move while the save dialog is open, it IS downloading to the cache). IE has done this for a long time - at least since IE4.