The end of Internet Explorer. Again. For Real.
Original image from Learning Technologies https://leaningtech.com/

The end of Internet Explorer. Again. For Real.

June 15, 2022, is here. Internet Explorer is being retired. Forcibly retired in some companies and long-forgotten having been retired at other organizations. And of course, Internet Explorer is such a part of the Internet itself where nothing EVER really dies, so it will live on for Long Term Servicing Branch (LTSB) users.

From our standpoint, at Browsium, this isn’t a big thing. Not our first rodeo, as they say. The company was founded based on needs generated from ‘the end of IE6,’ and IE held on for quite some time. Then IE7 and IE8 and so on. All the releases lost market share and slowly continued to become obsolete well before they disappeared from enterprise systems. Necessity is both the mother of invention and the owner of technical debt.

We also remind our customers and new prospects that this SHOULDN’T matter. While we started the business to tackle a legacy application problem, we knew that these problems are lifecycle issues, not a singular technical event. The specifics of addressing the challenge of Internet Explorer’s end of life are essential. Still, more crucial is having the tools and team that have been through many cycles of these kinds of problems.

As we say a (sort of) farewell to Internet Explorer, remember that the next end-of-life issue is coming before you know it. It’s the nature of the web. Internet Explorer was far from perfect, but the modern browsers aren’t perfect either. We learn better ways. We invent a better web ALL THE TIME. The takeaway from this end-of-life milestone should be that you don’t remember it. Having the tools from Browsium to identify the impacts and execute the business needs to continue operations should mean that the IE end of life is just another Thursday.

If you’re worried about the IE end-of-life impact on your organization, don’t be. We can help address these immediate questions and challenges. At the same time, we help you build a long-term plan around the IT Operations Management tools purpose-built to tackle the unique browser application management scenarios. We can help you ensure that the pace of web application change is under your control regardless of what vendors and platforms decide to do. Take control of your environment today and breath easier that the end isn’t anywhere near.

https://www.browsium.com/internet-explorer-end-of-life/

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Ben Katz的更多文章

  • Protecting against Log4j vulnerability and more

    Protecting against Log4j vulnerability and more

    Written by Browsium Founder - Matt Heller By now, you’ve heard and read extensively about the log4j vulnerability…

  • Internet Explorer 11 isn’t going away next week

    Internet Explorer 11 isn’t going away next week

    By Matt Heller: Read time 2 min 12 sec The timeline for Internet Explorer 11’s final demise is confusing. Microsoft…

    3 条评论
  • Windows 11 is on the way!

    Windows 11 is on the way!

    Microsoft introduced the world to Windows 11, and it looks like they’ve been focused on advancing the platform without…

  • Flash is finally, finally dead...

    Flash is finally, finally dead...

    Although the Adobe Flash EOL’s roadmap has been well documented and precise to the day, in traditional Microsoft…

    1 条评论
  • Spartan is dead, long live Spartan!

    Spartan is dead, long live Spartan!

    When Microsoft announced the end of Project Spartan (Edge Legacy), it seemed like yet another thing people would read…

    1 条评论
  • Edge Legacy End of Life

    Edge Legacy End of Life

    The web moves fast, but the lifetime for Edge ‘legacy’ was short by every measure. Not that we’d argue it should be…

    1 条评论
  • Just like that, Flash is gone

    Just like that, Flash is gone

    Adobe has been talking about the end of Flash support for a few years now. The once-dominant solution for interactive…

    4 条评论
  • Microsoft to force opening on Edge

    Microsoft to force opening on Edge

    In another step towards moving people from Internet Explorer to Edge, Microsoft will be introducing functionality in an…

  • Domain security runs through the browser

    Domain security runs through the browser

    By Matt Heller Founder of Browsium As previously discussed, the browser is at the center of the competitive efforts to…

    2 条评论
  • The Case for ITOM Visibility Into The Browser (Part 2)

    The Case for ITOM Visibility Into The Browser (Part 2)

    In case you missed it "The Case for ITOM Visibility Into the Browser (Part 1) The browser gets deployed without being…

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了