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Thursday 21 March 2013

Windows Web Browsers List And Internet Explorer Latest review Review

Windows Web Browsers List And Internet Explorer Review and Download



Index :::: Famous Browsers List


1.Internet Explorer
 
2.Chrome

3.The world

4.Opera

5.Safari

6.Mozilla Firefox

7.Netscape Navigator

8.Tencent Traveler

9.Maxthon


Now we are going to see windows browsers and reviews for each and every browsers..

And Official And unofficial downloading links are also given ...Please Use It...



Internet Explorer::::  

 Widely used Microsoft windows official browser. It gives lot of Options to web applications ..

This web browser supports all types of web pages with high accuracy .

This Browser Have good image quality . And Microsoft also give this browser an official support

Internet explorer 9 is the last version which is very advanced and which can be useful for touch screen computers with windows operating systems ... 

It also gives troubleshooting options when problems found 

Rating :::: GOOD BROWSER FOR MANY WEBSITES

screenshorts and logo's

 









 Youtube Videos About IE

IE 10 review 1

IE 10 Review 2

IE 10 Review 3



 Softpedia Review :::

Click here to go to softpedia review page 


 At first launch, you are presented with the “welcome page”, which provides the same information as in the case of Internet Explorer 9, but with updated graphics.

As such, it still promotes the Do Not Track privacy component and informs that the settings for Smart Screen Filter, Suggested Sites and Compatibility Lists Updates have remained unchanged.

Turned on by default, sending the Do Not Track header can be disabled from “Advanced” tab of Internet options, under Security. Microsoft is the first to introduce this request activated by default, against all criticizing voices. In Chrome and Firefox, the signal is turned off.

In terms of looks, Internet Explorer 10 is not much different from the previous major release and maintains the clean interface with hidden menu toolbar (press Alt key to reveal it) that’s been around for a few version now.

The most essential options are available under the gear icon, which grants access to the add-on management panel, Internet options and safety features (ActiveX Filtering, Tracking Protection, Smokescreen Filter or In Private Browsing).

Version 10 of Internet Explorer is the first one to offer Windows users the possibility to automatically load the last browsing session at start up, a feature that has been standard in all other major browser for years.

Up until this revision, this could be done only from the new tab page, where Microsoft bundled the menu for opening closed tabs and the In Private option. It is deactivated by default but you can enable it from the General tab of Internet options.

Also fresh in this build is the Spelling Correction feature, available in the add-on management panel. It is activated by default; it automatically marks misspelled text and corrects commonly misspelled words.


pcmag.com's Review :::

Click Here To visit Original review Page

The Look of IE9

IE's trimmed-down window header even has the back arrow button clipped off to give the most possible space to the Web page. The tabs are squared off, and moving the browser around the screen seemed snappier. The first time you run the new browser, you no longer have to go through a wizard for choosing search suggestions and other options, as you did for IE8—another welcome simplification. The first page you see is the "welcome to a more beautiful Web," which explains and demonstrates some of IE9's new capabilities.

Most pages displayed correctly, but occasionally I saw jumbled text, though this usually corrected itself when I scrolled down and back up on the page. And on one test machine, the browser occasionally just stopped responding, even preventing me from switching tabs. I still occasionally encounter a "Not Responding" error, with the browser window going dim and the blue doughnut spinning.

Interface

As mentioned, the interface is nearly identical to that of the IE9 beta. Its minimalist window leaves more room to the webpage contents than any other new browser, keeping controls to a single row and combining the address and search boxes into one. It's not as drastic, however, as Google's reduction of the interface to a single gear icon, and you can still enable IE's menus and toolbars, by right-clicking on the top window border.

Tabs. Microsoft has improved tabs work in IE9, bringing them up to date with the competition's. IE9 lets you drag tabs out of and back into your browser window to create new windows, as other browsers have done for a couple years. It even does a couple cool tricks with dragging tabs to a new window: If you do this while playing a video, the video continues to play as you drag it. Also, when you drag to the left or right edge of the screen in Windows 7, the new browser window created fills exactly half of the screen. This is as it should be—adhering to Aero Snap in Windows 7—but other browsers don't do this.

You can now place IE9's tabs on their own row if you find you're opening too many to fit. The tab with the focus is now brighter, making it stand out. I quite appreciate that I can now close a tab without switching to it, as I can in every other modern browser. But this only works if the window was sized large enough—nearly full screen on a laptop. Since IE crams everything on one row—the address/search box, tabs, and controls—tabs can get mighty narrow. But there's some help for that: arrows appear on either side of the tab bar if you open too many tabs to display in the allotted space.
The new tab page helpfully shows your most frequently visited pages, but you can hide these if you'd rather not have everyone seeing some sites you frequent. The new-tab page also lets you reopen closed tabs or your whole last session, or you can star InPrivate browsing from it. Now there's also a "Discover other sites you might like" icon there and link at the bottom which encourages you to use the Suggested sites feature.

Pinned Sites

Instead of trumpeting its own branding, IE9 gives the site you're visiting center stage. This is nowhere better demonstrated than in the new pinned-site feature. By simply dragging a webpage's icon down to the Windows 7 taskbar, you create a pinned site. This gives the site equal billing with an application. This is strongly reminiscent of Google's idea of every app as a Web app. With its pinned sites, IE9 goes further than Chrome in this regard. Chrome does have Web applications shortcuts, but they don't get IE9's OS integration. These include Windows 7 jumplists for sites that supply the necessary XML data in their code.

IE9 pinned sites not only get their own taskbar icons, but their favicon is used where a browser logo would normally be, in the upper left corner of the window, and even the back and forward buttons take on the color of the site icon. The logo and colors for IE9 pinned sites are automatically grabbed by the browser for display in the window border. If you navigate to a different domain, the icon remains the same as the original pinned site, which struck me as a bit disorienting. One final difference for pinned sites is that the Home button disappears from their menu bar.

A recent twist on IE9 pinned sited is that you can now add multiple sites to a pinned-site icon. Just open a new tab, right-click on the site icon, and choose "Add as a home page." Though I think that wording could be clarified and the feature made more obvious, the feature offers a convenient way to open a set of frequently visited sites.

Pinned sites are a big ace-in-the-hole for IE9, at least for Windows 7 users, and site owners can promote their sites for pinned treatment and offer buttons on their pages that pin a site automatically. Chrome's application shortcuts do have the advantage of giving the whole window to the site, but Microsoft's giving full app citizenship to sites is commendable.

The One Box

Internet Explorer team lead Dean Hachamovitch used to criticize Chrome's use of a combined address and search box, citing privacy concerns, but IE9 now has a single text box for addresses and search, too, called the One Box. Hachamovitch told me that IE9's version adds privacy, by letting you turn on an off the autosuggest feature of your search engine at will. If you still want separate address and search boxes, you can either install a search toolbar or use Opera or Firefox.

The IE9 One Box doesn't offer Chrome's brilliant Instant feature, which loads previously visited sites before you even finish typing their address, but at least it lets you choose among search providers at the bottom of its dropdown suggestions.

One welcome behavior of the One Box is that after you enter a search and get your result page, the box doesn't switch to a URL, but instead your search terms remain there, in case you want to further refine it. And unlike in the IE9 beta, you can now enter searches like "site:site domain" into the One Box to limit results to a specific site.

Thanks To www.pcmag.com

Original website review page visit...



Download Links ....

 Microsoft Official Website-Click On me


CNET Download site-click on me ...


Soft32.com Download Link- Click On me ...


Softonic.com Download Link-click on me...

 UNOFFICIAL :::



Thanks To 

Google Images (www.google.com/images)

Youtube(www.youtube.com)

And special Thanks to free review Websites and users ..

Reviews collected And Edited

By 

Er.MR.Thiyagaraju

sacrificeraju@gmail.com

+919042719401(India)(Tamilnadu)(Udumalpet)

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