John C. Dvorak makes an interesting point in his PC Mag column about Internet Explorer being Microsoft's biggest mistake. In John's view, Internet Explorer distracts Microsoft from concentrating on their operating and office products, creates most of their antitrust problems and compounds security problems in Windows. He suggests they should ditch Internet Explorer and do a deal with Mozilla.
He's quite right about the security flaws. Take Internet Explorer out of Windows and you have a much more stable and secure system. However I think John overlooks why IE was developed in the way it was.
In 1995, Microsoft had been caught napping by the Internet and Netscape appeared to be a real risk. So MS had to bury Netscape, the quickest way was to integrate IE into Windows giving functions that Netscape could never do. It worked.
As John points out, the cost of that was years of litigation and massive security problems for Windows users. But IE did achieve it's task. It's notable that since Netscape's effective demise that there was barely any development in Internet Explorer until Mozilla and Opera started gaining traction.
Microsoft strike me as a company in trouble. Even the biggest companies have trouble juggling too many balls at the same time. I agree with John: It's time for MS to drop Internet Explorer and concentrate on their OS and Office products.
Wednesday, April 26, 2006
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