[vip_students] Re: Google Chrome and Internet Explorer: What's changed in the world of web browsers? | Irish Examiner

  • From: Tony Sweeney <tonymsweeney@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: vip_students@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Fri, 15 Apr 2016 17:58:20 +0100

Absolutely correct.

I was often told on lists fora and the like to (not in so many words) avoid Chrome like the plague if you are a screen reader user.

So why have folk go to all the trouble of installing same and have to go through all of that inaccessibility frustration!

Surely such posts are supposed to assist us here.

Tony Sweeney.
On 15/04/2016 17:00, Eleanor burke wrote:

Dominique
I thought that Crome was not very accessible for people with screen readers so a little puzzled as to why you are posting this.

On 15 Apr 2016, at 16:52, Dominique Farrell <hollyandopal@xxxxxxxxx <mailto:hollyandopal@xxxxxxxxx>> wrote:

Google Chrome and Internet Explorer: What's changed in the world of web browsers? | Irish Examiner

http://www.irishexaminer.com/breakingnews/business/google-chrome-and-internet-explorer-whats-changed-in-the-world-of-web-browsers-728306.html


  Google Chrome and Internet Explorer: What's changed in the world of
  web browsers?

New statistics have revealed that Google Chrome is on the verge of overtaking Microsoft's Internet Explorer as the most used web browser in the world.

If so it would bring to an end a period of complete dominance Microsoft has so far enjoyed in the digital age, where their Internet Explorer browser has been the go-to way of exploring the internet for 20 years.


  So, what is Chrome?

(Mark Lennihan/AP)

Chrome is Google's own-made web browser, that launched in 2008 and works across not just Windows, but also Apple's Mac line-up of desktop and laptops, as well as smartphones and tablets running iOS, Android and Windows.

At a time when few alternatives were available to Internet Explorer on Windows, Chrome offered a simplistic approach to navigating the internet, including the merging of the address bar and search bar that was a key selling point at the time, and would soon become common practice across different browsers.


    Why is Internet Explorer now in decline?

(Damian Dovarganes/AP)

Having for years been the default option on millions of computers -- particularly in offices around the world -- IE has long since been outstripped by its rivals. Apple's Safari, as well as Chrome and Mozilla Firefox and Opera are all seen as faster, more usable browsers -- and given that they're available across many platforms, these days users now have far more choice than in the past.

Microsoft is also slowly phasing out Internet Explorer, confirming that it would stop supporting versions earlier than IE 11 from January this year. This forced many users to either update to a newer version of Explorer or make the jump to Windows 10, where it has been replaced by the new browser, Edge.

In both these cases, many chose to go elsewhere.


    Is the end of IE then?

(Steven Senne/AP)

Long term, it would appear that Microsoft would like to get everyone onto Windows 10 and that would mean saying goodbye to Explorer. Deals have been struck with governments and other big businesses to keep supporting older versions for some years to come, so IE isn't going to disappear completely any time soon, but the software's best days are most definitely long gone.


    When will Chrome take over as most used?

(Paul Sakuma/AP)

If the figures continue to move as they are, Chrome is likely to take top spot by this summer, though it could be sooner if Chrome uptake speeds up.

Chrome's appeal has always been how universal it is across devices, and soon that will tell in the market share numbers.



Sent from my iPhone

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