Image: Internet Explorer 7 Beta 2 an easier installation than expected - TechRepublic

Image: Internet Explorer 7 Beta 2 an easier installation than expected

  • 1 of 15 IE7 Installation

    The download page looks innocent enough, but what’s on that support page I wonder. Maybe I’d better look before I download.

    &copy CNET Networks, Inc.<br />Mark W. Kaelin
  • Hmm. I may have to spoof Web sites into thinking I’m using IE 6 to get it to work right. That doesn’t exactly inspire confidence.

  • Gulp! Here we go; there is no turning back now.

  • Sheesh! I have to validate in order to install a beta version of a Web browser. Paranoid much?

  • A beta with updates; this is going well.

  • Well, the deed is done and fingers are crossed.

  • One time questions — I’m anti phising, so yeah that’s okay.

  • Customer Experience Improvement Program? No thanks; if Microsoft can be paranoid so can I.

  • I skipped the tour — I mean it is just a Web browser after all.

  • Well, the TechRepublic Web site seems to render just fine, so it can’t be all bad can it? Note the new toolbar in IE7. I also like the fact that it integrated my Google tool bar from IE6.

  • Besides tabs, which everyone knows from Firefox, IE7 has a nifty tab thumbnail feature so I can see what each tab is pointing to — not sure how I would use it, but it’s a spiffy addition.

  • The built-in RSS reader is a nice touch; I can retire my old RSS Reader.

  • I can keep track of the latest TechRepublic articles and downloads from within a single application. I wonder what Apotheon’s article is talking about — let’s click and find out.

  • For my installation, IE7 defaulted to Google for searching the Web. I would have expected MSN, so that was a nice surprise. I can add connections to just about any search engine I want.

  • I show up in the oddest places. On Google, a search of my name returned a discussion of an article on reading POP3 accounts with Perl. The same search on MSN returned this discussion on creating a TechRepublic guild in the World of Warcraft. I’ll let you decide which is more interesting.

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BD

Bill Detwiler is the Editor for Technical Content and Ecosystem at Celonis. He is the former Editor in Chief of TechRepublic and previous host of TechRepublic's Dynamic Developer podcast and Cracking Open, CNET and TechRepublic's popular online show. Previously, Bill was an IT manager in the social research and energy industries. He has bachelor's and master's degrees from the University of Louisville, where he has also lectured on computer crime and crime prevention.