Microsoft launched the final version of Internet Explorer 8 (IE eight) towards the Web precisely a week back. But that doesn;t mean consumers and developers are satisfied. Rather, countless are champing in the bit to obtain Microsoft to commit to their favorite lacking functions for IE nine.Microsoft, for its component,
Windows 7 Professional, won;t say something about IE nine, apart from it;s inside the planning stage. In the course of an IE eight Professional Zone Internet chat on March 25,
microsoft Office 2010 Activation, members of the IE staff reminded participants that Microsoft isn;t prepared to speak at all about IE 9 dates or characteristics. The team truly isn;t prepared but to accept officially ideas from your user/developer base for Microsoft;s next browser update.(”We will be placing a new form on [the Microsoft private test site] Connect for improvements for the subsequent edition of IE. We will send out an email towards the Technical Beta participants when it is available on Connect,” one Softie told chat participants yesterday.)Microsoft;s attempts to slow things down isn;t stopping people from pitching their top priorities from their IE 9 wish lists. Among the attributes participants and other users with whom I;ve spoken are mentioning: a file download manager, support for various Cascading Style Sheet (CSS) Version 3 characteristics, an XML parser, sounds for Web Slices, better RSS support, and more granular control over JavaScript pages.One chat participant opined that password save/confirmation shouldn;t force an IE page load/login.Kymberlee Price, a Program Manager for Security on the IE group, responded:“Password management is some thing we looked at in IE8 but ultimately had to cut. As a consumer I totally understand why this is a popular and compelling scenario. But as a security person I see it as fraught with challenges to implement. Login with a single master password for example - differentiation of passwords is beneficial to protecting sensitive data like bank accounts separate from less sensitive data like Twitter accounts.”Another chatter said XHTML+MathML support would help students and others who need to publish math-centric content on the Web. A Microsoft official said Microsoft is hearing “a great deal of requests for this feature, as well as for scalable vector graphics (SVG), “both of which add richer presentation to the Web.” But he made no promises that these would be component of IE 9.Participants inside the ExpertZone chat also asked Microsoft officials about recently reported problems between sites running in Restricted Sites zone (like SpywareBlaster, Spybot, etc.) and the ultimate IE 8 build.Eric Lawrence, IE Security Program Manager, responded:“This was a side-effect of a recent change to better support non-standard top-level-domains which are becoming more common. You can read about the general issue with non-standard TLDs on IE8 maintains an internal public suffix list. That list changes IE;s handling of ‘known; special TLDs. Unfortunately, the Zones registry format has a dependency on TLDs, which means that we must recalculate the registry against this new TLD list. That works fine in the general case,
Microsoft Office Ultimate 2007, but fails badly when there are thousands of sites in the lists. We;re working on this issue.”(Again, no official word on when a fix might be coming. I;d doubt this one will have to wait until IE 9,
Microsoft Office 2010 Home And Student, nonetheless.)I asked Zhu Yan, who runs the LiveSino.Net enthusiast site,
Microsoft Office Standard 2010, what he;d like to see in IE 9. He had a wish list a mile long already, including everything in the aforementioned download manager, to via the internet Favorites service and Windows Live ############## synchronization. He also said he;s wishing for better rendering, more compelling third-party add-ons and integration with Morro (the OneCare security service replacement that Microsoft hasn;t said something about for months).What are you hoping to see in IE nine?