Microsoft's new Internet Explorer 7 browser won't pass a stringent standards test that rivals have embraced.
Microsoft has finally told Web developers what they've wanted to hear for years, promising support for graphics and style sheet standards.
A Queensland Web design company is using technology that is said to make it easier for blind and visually impaired people to use the Internet.
More than four years after its inception, the open-source browser is ready for the public. And its impact could go beyond browsing
Opera Software has challenged Microsoft to develop a browser which adheres to standards but will Microsoft take it up?
Touted as a powerful, yet easy-to-use Internet-enabled desktop, KDE 2.2.1 lives up to all expectations. Despite appearances, version 2.2.1 is much more than a minor 'dot' iteration of its previous manifestation, KDE 2.1. Numerous bug fixes have been incorporated into the product, and many enhancements have been made.
There's no need to stop whatever you're doing and rush to download Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.5 from the company's Web site. The enhancements in the latest version of Microsoft's free Web browser seem designed more to benefit the company's corporate ambitions than to bring significant benefits to users.
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