All About Microsoft
Mary-Jo FoleyMicrosoft IE9 developer preview with HTML5 support ready for download
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Mary-Jo Foley
Biography
Mary-Jo Foley

Mary Jo Foley has covered the tech industry for 20 years for a variety of publications, including ZDNet, eWeek and Baseline. She has kept close tabs on Microsoft strategy, products and technologies for the past 10 years. In the late 1990s, she penned the award-winning "At The Evil Empire" column for ZDNet, and more recently the Microsoft Watch blog for Ziff Davis.
Got a tip? Send her an email with your rants, rumors, tips and tattles. Confidentiality guaranteed.
On March 16, Microsoft is making a first developer preview of Internet Explorer (IE) 9 available for download from www.IETestDrive.com.
The IE 9 Platform Preview doesn’t include the IE 9 user interface; instead, it is the plumbing, specifically the new Microsoft JavaScript engine (which is codenamed “Chakra”) and the new graphics subsystem, coupled with a home page full of test sites. There’s no back button and no built-in security. It’s basically the IE 9 rendering engine and early developer tools.
Microsoft officials will show off the IE 9 developer preview and discuss Microsoft’s planned support for more of the emerging HTML5, CSS3 and SVG2 standards with that product during the Tuesday morning Mix 10 keynote.
“We love HTML5 so much we actually want it to work,” quipped Dean Hachamovitch, the General Manager of the IE team, during a briefing I attended at Microsoft last week about IE 9.
As Microsoft supports more of the HTML5, CSS3 and SVG2 markup, the company expects its ACID3 ratings to go up, officials said. At the Professional Developers Conference in November, Microsoft officials showed a very early build of IE 9, which earned an ACID3 score of 32. The build out today is up to 55, according to company officials.
HTML5 applications are a lot richer and demanding, in terms of graphics and speed than Ajax applications. So it’s logical they’ll work better on multi-core machines where the browser can take advantage of multicore performance, Microsoft officials argue. That’s why Microsoft’s new JavaScript engine is built to take advantage of two cores, with the second core compiling JavaScript down to native machine code to help speed up the browser. (Once the native code is available, there’s no need to use interpreted code on Core 1, meaning an app spends less time in JavaScript.)
Microsoft is planning to deliver a lot more preview builds of IE 9 before it hits beta. In fact, the team is committing to delivering an update every eight weeks, and to interact with developers via the Microsoft Connect feedback loop. Microsoft officials wouldn’t say when to expect the first IE 9 beta or to provide any kind of ship date target for the final release. (I’m still betting Microsoft will deliver the final a few months before Windows 8 ships, in 2011 or so.)
Microsoft’s high-level goals for IE 9 include making the browser snappier, maintaining compatibility with Web sites at at least the same level as IE 8 and, ultimately, enabling developers to use the same markup across IE 9 and other non-Microsoft browsers. That last of these three guiding principles is more theoretical and real at this point, but it’s interesting Microsoft is thinking this way.
I’ll be curious to hear what developers think of the preview once you download it.
Update: Hachamovitch said in a Q&A with press and analysts following the keynote that IE 9 will not support XP. (No big surprise there.) The preview runs on Vista SP2 and higher (which I’d figure will be the operating systems supported once IE 9 ships in final form).

Mary Jo has covered the tech industry for more than 20 years.
Disclosure
Mary-Jo Foley
Freelance journalist/blogger Mary Jo Foley has nothing to disclose. WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get). I do not own Microsoft stock or stock in any of its partners or competitors. I have no business ventures that are sponsored by/funded by Microsoft or any of its partners or competitors. I have not accepted any consulting funds from Microsoft, any of its partners or its competitors for any studies/projects.
Biography
Mary-Jo Foley
Mary Jo Foley has covered the tech industry for 20 years for a variety of publications, including ZDNet, eWeek and Baseline. She has kept close tabs on Microsoft strategy, products and technologies for the past 10 years. In the late 1990s, she penned the award-winning "At The Evil Empire" column for ZDNet, and more recently the Microsoft Watch blog for Ziff Davis.
Got a tip? Send her an email with your rants, rumors, tips and tattles. Confidentiality guaranteed.
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Related Discussions on TechRepublic
Did you know you can take part in these discussions with your ZDNet membership?Talkback Most Recent of 92 Talkback(s)
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Exciting!
They still have a way to go for 100/100 acid test result... but that's the case is with all other browser vendors.
Edit: except for opera that hits 100/100samunplugged(Edited: 03/16/2010 09:21 AM) -
surveyork03/16/2010 11:02 AM
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RE: Microsoft IE9 developer preview with HTML5 support ready for download
Looking good so far!Loverock Davidson03/16/2010 09:51 AM -
I happen to agree
IE 8 was alright, but I don't think I'd use any other browser out there that doesn't have basic navigation tools. Yet here I am, working around that downside. XD I assume the type of people on here are also the type that are going to be doing the same. ^_^;goff25603/16/2010 11:46 AM -
Uh... Did you guys read the article FULLY?
Sheesh..
"The IE 9 Platform Preview doesn?t include the IE 9 user interface; instead, it is the plumbing, specifically the new Microsoft JavaScript engine (which is codenamed ?Chakra?) and the new graphics subsystem, coupled with a home page full of test sites. There?s no back button and no built-in security. It?s basically the IE 9 rendering engine and early developer tools."
Do you REALLY wanna go out on the wild and wooly web without security...?
Deploying this now is something crazy only Mike Cox would do... Geeze.Wolfie2K3(Edited: 03/16/2010 02:51 PM) -
Unlike you guys
I don't really go to sites that are a security hazard. If I did, I would go on them with my IE 8. That, of course, means that none of you should be looking up your porn on IE 9 preview.
Back Button? Why would I need that? I can just enter the website address again.goff25603/16/2010 03:07 PM -
Er.. You DID get the security advisory today about Drudge
Seems "good" sites have been serving up malware and such as well..
Fortunately, this thing seems to be quite limited as to where it can goWolfie2K303/16/2010 04:14 PM -
Malware?
Eh? I trust my nice firewall and virus program to take care of those.goff25603/16/2010 04:19 PM -
RE: Microsoft IE9 developer preview with HTML5 support ready for download
I'm a harsh Microsoft critic but after looking at what
they want to do with the browser... I'm actually excited.
(Can't believe I just said that!)meeyanpeat03/16/2010 10:11 AM -
Fast, SVG, better CSS and HTML5 including video
The hardware accellerated stuff on
http://ie.microsoft.com/testdrive/
is amazing.
Flying Images demo makes Chrome look slow
Demo link: http://ie.microsoft.com/testdrive/Performance/01FlyingImages/Default.html
Also dual HD video trough HTML5 video tag on a netbook in keynote was impressive. Chrome using html5 video tag has troubles rendering singel HD video and does not perform dual video's.IE803/16/2010 10:20 AM
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