Posted on
September 17, 2010 by
admin
So I started playing with IE9 beta today. I wasn’t really a fan of the preview tools (platform previews) that MS provided previously – so now that there is a beta, I’ll use it and abuse it. (In fact, It’s already crashed twice on me.. more on that in the pics)
First some background – My main workstation is currently Vista Home Premium x64 with 6gb Ram, FirePro v4800 1GB GPU, Intel q9550 quad core overclocked at 8×400=3.2GHz. Internet Explorer 9 will not work on Windows XP. Period. (except through a vista/7 VM of course).
I couldn’t even get it to work on my Vista machine – it wouldn’t install. Or at least that’s what I assumed. After leaving it for several hours (I don’t really know how long, as I wasn’t there), when I came back it told me to install an update (which it provided a link to the relevant KB) (Why it couldn’t do it automatically like Windows Update is able to is beyond me). So – if you try to install the Beta, and it seems to hang during the “downloading required updates” portion – that’s likely why.
So I installed the update. Then started the IE9 installation procedure again – at which time it seemed to hang again during the “Installing” (downloading more IE9 files) step, then after leaving it for several minutes (maybe 1/2 hour?) (My network usage according to the task manager was at 0 – it wasn’t downloading – I don’t know what it was doing). Then it installed and told me to restart. (You know, all Microsoft branded products should know how to install itself without affecting kernel-level features forcing a reboot… – that’s sooo 1990′s).
So I rebooted. And opened IE9. Voila. Oh – I should also say that I have Aero Transparency turned off, and I’m running with a dual monitor (2×21″) setup from the firepro.
Top Impressions and Things I like with IE9:
- Ctrl-L works to put the cursor in the address bar to type in URLs finally – without that little “Open Location” window.
- Address bar and search conglomerated (like in Chrome)
- Clean tabs
- colored tabs somehow representing associated tabs (like if you open a new link in a new tab, it’ll have the same color) – same as in IE8
- Middle Mouse Wheel click to close a tab – without actually opening the tab
- Ability to easily resize/move the border between the URL bar and the tab bar
- Ability to swap sides of the Stop/Refresh buttons
- HTML5 support
- CSS3 support
- IE9 developer tools (seem about the same as IE8)
- Popular sites (like Safari and Chrome)
- Reopen Last Session ability
- It’s Fast!
- More safety/security/screening/phishing type ‘intelligence’ built-in.
- a sort of RSS feed reader
- BONUS – Hardware Acceleration – and it’s Fast.
Images Best viewed on a 21″ or bigger screen with browser in full screen (1680×1050 or bigger resolution).
There we go. A list of things that I actually like about IE9. Hopefully Enterprise users (IT departments) will drop XP in favor of Windows 7 so that they can use IE9. As a Web Developer… it would be oh so nice. The local university has made the switch.
They’ve capped hardware accelerated pages to 60fps. Why? Well, first off, our eyes operate at around 24fps (hence the reason film is at 24fps and almost flickers) – but of course our brain can perceive more. So why stop at 60? Look at your power bill. Electricity (in north america) is 60hz. What’s a hz? Hertz. Frequency. The reciprocal of time. 60hz=1/60s. Almost all LCD screens (the defacto standard for computer screens these days) operate at 60hz refresh rate – because it’s easier to design the circuit. So if our video card is putting out more than 60fps, and our screens are only operating at 60hz, then it’s wasted GPU cycles. 60 is smooth enough for me!
Almost all of the tests I did (from IE9′s page) capped at 60 with my Firepro – I’ll let you look through the screenshots to see which ones didn’t.
Ahh yes, screenshots. Nothing really fun to see, but people are visual, and like pretty pictures. So – take a peek at these.
I look forward to having IE9 more and more stable and soon the default on a lot of computers (I also love Chrome, Safari and Firefox) – but I dislike hacking my websites I design to work with older IE versions.
oh – about the crash – I’m not sure what or why it happened, but when playing one of the feature videos, it crashed – twice in the same spot. Another tab crashed while in the background, idle. But – like with chrome, each tab gets it’s own process handler, and can crash and recover much more cleanly than before.
When you have LOTS of tabs open, they just keep squishing in there – no sidescrolling, or grouping feature that I can see. I really like FireFox 4′s tab canvas thing. (tab candy).
