Internet Explorer 7 Review
This page
has a 3 part review of Internet Explorer 7. The 1st
part is Our Thoughts, the 2nd is a Review Summary and the 3rd is a Comprehensive
Review from an industry
expert and professional. The review has been
designed to be simple, mostly non technical and can
be easily understood by most surfers.
Remember, sometimes its better to judge for
yourself, rather than taking someone else's word for
it but knowing the pros and cons can help in your
own analysis and evaluation.
Checkout our IE7
Features and IE7 Add-Ons page for all new features and how you can make your
web browser work for YOU or just be more useful.
Our
Thoughts by InternetExplorer-Firefox.com
The
first thing you realise is that Internet Explorer 7
has had a facelift. The standard navigation buttons
have moved and now it has the much awaited tabbed
browsing like its rival Firefox.
Amongst other things, IE7 has a more slim-line
design more than Firefox and an appealing feel to
it. With its built-in RSS reader and Phishing-Filter
to protect you from online fraudsters, IE7 has been
much improved, so you'd think.
In
fact, IE7 uses a lot of the IE6's codes and it has a
much larger installation file than Firefox and Opera
combined!! Like its predecessors, IE7 and other
Microsoft software have a long delay before patches
are available for security vulnerabilities and
although Microsoft has boasted the new advanced
security features, its not actually that far
advanced.
I'm
not saying that IE7 isn't secure but the hype
created for it, isn't justified. Its like IE7 has
combined parts of a good anti-spyware and anti-virus
software and put it in with the IE7 package. But
honestly, its not that bad and if you run good
anti-virus software's its not a problem. This also
goes for Firefox and Opera, although out the three,
Firefox is the most secure by its self.
A
great way you can make IE7 more secure, is by using
RoboForm and Windows Defender, which can be found in
the Add-Ons page.
So,
do I recommend IE7? Well yes. Simple reason is that
I've found IE7 allows me to quickly navigate through
several webpage's and sites, whilst remaining more
slim-line than Firefox and Opera, the content
appears as it should and it has new features that
are essential for any Microsoft Operating System.
So
even if your not going to use it, install it to have
a better running OS.
Review
Summary by CNET Editor
The good: IE 7 includes built-in tabbed browsing; antiphishing technology; an RSS
reader; and a redesigned Favorites Center.
The bad: IE 7 is limited to Windows XP SP2 users
only; installation requires reboot; reuses old IE 6 code and doesn't yet
comply with current Web standards; doesn't match all the features found
in Firefox or Opera; carries a Microsoft legacy of not patching its
IE flaws quickly enough.
The bottom line: IE 7 was Microsoft's one chance to
leapfrog ahead of the competition, but the company has only barely
caught sight of the current front-runners. For more features and
greater security, switch to Mozilla Firefox
Comprehensive Review by CNET Editor
Robert Vamosi
Microsoft has released Internet
Explorer 7 but only for Windows XP SP2 users. If you
are running a previous version of Microsoft Windows,
you'll need to upgrade to Windows XP SP2 first. A
slightly more secure version of Internet Explorer 7
will be Windows Vista operating system. Notable
among the new features within IE 7 for Windows XP
are a redesigned interface, tabbed browsing, a
built-in RSS feed reader, and a new Favorites
Center. Despite nearly two and half years of
development, the new browser falls short of
complying with Web standards and of matching
features found in competing browsers, and despite an
aggressive marketing campaign to the contrary, IE 7
is not that much more secure that IE 6, in part
because of its reuse of old IE 6 code and a
crippling legacy that Microsoft is slow to patch
existing IE flaws.
Internet Explorer 7 for Windows XP SP2 can be
downloaded for free. Beginning in November 2007,
users of Windows XP SP2 will automatically receive a
Windows Update notice that Internet Explorer 7 is
available. Enterprises may, however, block the
automatic downloads of IE 7 until corporate IT staff
has evaluated the new version. In a workplace, check
with your system admin before installing IE 7 on
your office desktop.
Installation for IE 7 includes two unusual requests.
One, Microsoft asks that users briefly disable
antivirus protection. Microsoft claims that there
have been some conflicts between IE 7 installations
and some antivirus engines, so to err on the safe
side, the software giant asks that you disable your
antivirus protection until the installation is
complete. Neither Mozilla Firefox nor Opera make
this request. Microsoft uses its own
malicious-software removal tool during the
installation of IE 7, and it is perhaps this tool
that conflicts with some antivirus apps.
The other unusual request is that Microsoft asks
users to reboot their computer after installation.
Neither Opera nor Mozilla Firefox requires a reboot.
Unique to Internet Explorer 7 is an RSS feed engine
that renders Web feeds as a readable page, and a
reboot installs this engine in the system kernel.
For the most part, we like the built-in RSS reader
feature. Opera includes a newsgroups-like RSS
reader, while Firefox allows you to associate RSS
feeds with third-party readers.
After the installation reboot, Internet Explorer 7
displays a first-run screen where you can turn on
antiphishing (not enabled by default) and select
your default language. After that, you're finally
ready to begin.
Long-time IE 6 users will react differently to the
redesigned toolbar--some will like it, most will
not. For a look inside, see the Internet Explorer 7
for Windows XP SP2 Features & Tour. Microsoft claims
users wanted the buttons and bars rearranged; in
doing so, Microsoft deviates from the other popular
Internet browsers on the market today. The back and
forward buttons haven't moved; they're now
compressed into the upper-left corner, and their
individual drop-down menus have merged into one
drop-down list. The address bar is now at the very
top of the browser so that malicious spyware
toolbars can't obscure or hijack it. Unfortunately,
Microsoft has chosen the address bar to also display
antiphishing and site certificate information,
making it sometimes a very busy place. Perhaps the
worst new placement is the refresh button, which is
now located immediately after the address bar. Even
after using the beta for a few months, we still find
it hard to remember where the refresh button is
located.
Like Mozilla Firefox and Opera, IE 7 has a built-in
Internet search box in the top tier of the
interface. If you install Internet Explorer on a
clean system, the search box defaults to the
little-used Windows Live.com site; however, if you
upgrade and you already have a preference for, say,
Google.com, Internet Explorer will respect your
wishes and ask whether you want to continue using
Google as your default search engine. If, on a clean
system, you wish to change your preference from
Windows Live.com to Google.com, IE 7 takes you to a
search engine page where you can add additional
search engines (oddly, Google is one of a limited
few sites that do not include colourful logos, so
look hard). Once it's added, you must still click to
make Google your default, but the process is
relatively painless. Unlike Firefox, IE 7 does not
display search suggestions from your chosen search
engine.
On the second tier of the redesigned IE 7 interface,
in the upper left, Microsoft places its Favorites
Center, accessible via the familiar star icon and a
new Add to Favorites star icon. The Favorites Center
replaces the Favorites sidebar and includes tabs for
RSS feeds and History. Next to the Favorites Center
is the Tabbed Browsing section (see below for more),
followed by the relocated Command Bar, which
includes Homepage, RSS, Printer, Page, and Tools,
with the latter being an omnibus drop-down menu of
settings and enhancements.
Should you decide to remove Internet Explorer 7, you
will return to Internet Explorer 6. You can't
completely remove Internet Explorer--not without
considerable effort. Because Microsoft has
thoroughly bundled the Internet browser within its
Windows operating system (surfacing, for example,
whenever you need to view an HTML document within
Microsoft Word), we do not recommend removing
Internet Explorer entirely.
Perhaps the biggest change within IE 7, aside from
the overall interface redesign, is tabbed browsing,
a feature already found within Firefox and Opera.
Tabbed browsing allows you to open, view, and close
multiple pages within one IE 7 session. The tabs,
which can be reordered, can also be previewed on a
page with clickable thumbnail displays of each open
tab. We prefer Opera, which provides native
thumbnail views as your mouse hovers over each tab.
The page preview available within IE 7, called Quick
Tabs, requires an extra mouse click, which is an
annoyance for the ergonomically minded.
Speaking of accessibility features, IE 7 includes
zoom technology and the new Clear-type page
technology, which Microsoft claims renders page
fonts as sharp and clear as those printed on a piece
of paper. We find the IE 7 page zoom a bit clunky
compared with that of Opera, which uses the scroll
button on your mouse; Microsoft uses hot keys,
preset sizes, and an option to render at a custom
size. Even if you zoom to the maximum level, 400
percent, we found that the Clear-text technology
within IE 7 remains quite clear with fonts, although
art and photos do become pixilated.
Printing within IE 7 has also been enhanced; like
Mozilla Firefox, pages within IE 7 now automatically
shrink to fit on the printed page, sometimes
resulting in microprinted text. You should always
preview the page first so that you can also
customize the shrink if needed.
Like Firefox, Internet Explorer has various add-ons;
however, Microsoft can't match the large
international community of developers that Mozilla
enjoys.
RSS isn't treated lightly within IE7; in fact,
Microsoft built an entire RSS reader and bundled it
in with the browser. Now when you click on the RSS
button, you'll see a listing of the feeds provided
by a given Web site. Click the feed you want, and
IE7 displays the latest headlines and blurbs. Unlike
IE6, the page is readable (no more XML gibberish),
with links to subscribe and to update the current
feed.
Security enhancements within IE 7 for Windows XP SP2
include increased malware protection by requiring
you to opt-in when using ActiveX components
(previously, ActiveX components installed
automatically unless you changed the Internet
options settings), along with an increased default
Internet security level (medium-high), a new layer
of certificate authentication, and antiphishing
technology. Microsoft has added security protection
to its new RSS reader as well, accepting only valid
RSS feeds and not malware. There are also built-in
code protections against Cross-Domain script attacks
and malicious URL handling. However, much of the
code used to create IE 7 has essentially remained
unchanged from that of IE 6, so many of the
non-ActiveX flaws now being discovered within IE 6
will likely affect IE 7. Given that Microsoft fixes
only between one and five Internet Explorer flaws
each month, we do not find IE 7 to be substantially
more secure than IE 6. Further security protection,
such as the sandboxing of all Internet Explorer
sessions, will be offered within the Windows Vista
version of Internet Explorer 7.
Also unchanged within IE 7 is the underlying
rendering engine; IE 7 still uses essentially the IE
4 Web engine. So in terms of page performance,
Mozilla Firefox, which updated its Web engine with
Firefox 1.5, remains the much faster browser.
Speaking of rendering, IE 7 offers Clear-type text
enhancements but still does not offer full Cascading
Style Sheet 2.1 (CSS 2.1) standards compatibility
and has spotty support of XHTML 1.1, HTML 4.01, WML
, ECMAScript, DOM 2, and SVG 1.1--standards
supported by the W3C organization. Thus, IE 7 fails
what is called the Acid2 Test, a test designed by
the Web Standards Project to demonstrate complete
standards compliance. So far, among the browsers
reviewed by CNET, only Opera has passed the latest
Acid2 test, with Mozilla Firefox expected to comply
shortly. As Web designers adopt these standards,
some sites may begin break as IE 7 falls farther
behind the standard used by Web designers worldwide.
IE 7 includes Microsoft's new antiphishing
technology, designed to prevent users from providing
personal data to fraudulent Web sites. Microsoft has
touted its new technology (partnering with security
vendors Cyveillance, InternetIdentity, MarkMonitor,
and RSA Security's Cyota) as superior to others, yet
in our own admittedly limited tests, we found that
IE 7 consistently failed to catch phishing sites
less than 1 hour old, although IE 7 caught all
phishing sites known for at least 1 hour or more.
Most phishing sites are removed after their initial
72 hours. We found that stand-alone antiphishing
filters, such as that from Netcraft, performed far
better than IE 7 in flagging brand-new phishing
sites. Microsoft says it is constantly updating its
antiphishing technology and hopes to stop newer
phishing sites, as well as old phishing sites.
There are a lot of changes within IE 7, though not
as many as we'd hoped and some that are merely
cosmetic. Missing are innovative, cutting-edge
features such as search engine suggestions, live
feeds within bookmarks, inline spell-checking, and
session restore--features offered within
Firefox--
or thumbnail tab previews, desktop widgets, or voice
(which can read Web pages aloud)--features offered
by Opera 9. Given a proposed 18-month development
cycle for the next release of Internet Explorer, IE
7 was Microsoft's one chance to leapfrog ahead of
the competition, but the company has only barely
caught sight of the current front-runners.
That said, everyone should upgrade to
IE 7 when offered the chance, even if you never
intend to use it. Because Internet Explorer is so
tightly bound within Windows XP SP2 (for example, if
you view an HTML document in Microsoft Word, you're
using IE technology), it's better to have the
improved code within IE 7 running on your system
than not. But for a truly secure Internet browser
with more features, we still recommend Mozilla
Firefox. |