End of the line for Internet Explorer in 2022

  • 🐕 I am attempting to get the site runnning as fast as possible. If you are experiencing slow page load times, please report it.
The only times I've used Internet Explorer since like 2008 were when buying a new PC and having to go online to download a different browser, and at a job I held a few years ago where certain applications would only work in Internet Explorer (and they wouldn't allow me to download another browser to use for anything else).

Oh dear, this is going to have further repercussions than any of you realise. Not to power level or anything but i work in IT & let me tell you the amount of shitty little training websites, software portals (alot of hotels use a system that Oracle used to sell for bookings etc & it needs to be run through a IE frontend as the new version they made is a cloud based security hole riddled nightmare so a lot of organisations won't move to it), etc, that need old versions of HTML & ancient protocols like SSL 1.0 that are now only supported by IE is crazy.

This will also likely cause a lot of old websites to just be non functioning & inaccessible, essentially shrinking the internet down even further to a blasted landscape of Twitter weirdos & Redditors locked in a forever war. What do you guys think anyway? I personally think its a good thing overall but is also a little sad to see Googles iron fisted rule over browsers cement even further.
Didn't they do something with Edge recently that allows it to run old shitty things that need IE? I remember seeing an article somewhere, but this was a few months ago and I could be misremembering.
 
  • Feels
Reactions: IAmNotAlpharius
Oh dear, this is going to have further repercussions than any of you realise. Not to power level or anything but i work in IT & let me tell you the amount of shitty little training websites, software portals (alot of hotels use a system that Oracle used to sell for bookings etc & it needs to be run through a IE frontend as the new version they made is a cloud based security hole riddled nightmare so a lot of organisations won't move to it), etc, that need old versions of HTML & ancient protocols like SSL 1.0 that are now only supported by IE is crazy.

This will also likely cause a lot of old websites to just be non functioning & inaccessible, essentially shrinking the internet down even further to a blasted landscape of Twitter weirdos & Redditors locked in a forever war. What do you guys think anyway? I personally think its a good thing overall but is also a little sad to see Googles iron fisted rule over browsers cement even further.
My mechanic was telling me about how a lot of the tablets and devices they use on cars will just straight up boot up a program in IE to diagnose a problem or to pull up the service manual. I wonder how that's going to effect them. The new tools usually run on android but I imagine they're gonna lose access to a lot of those tools.
 
Oh dear, this is going to have further repercussions than any of you realise. Not to power level or anything but i work in IT & let me tell you the amount of shitty little training websites, software portals (alot of hotels use a system that Oracle used to sell for bookings etc & it needs to be run through a IE frontend as the new version they made is a cloud based security hole riddled nightmare so a lot of organisations won't move to it), etc, that need old versions of HTML & ancient protocols like SSL 1.0 that are now only supported by IE is crazy.

This will also likely cause a lot of old websites to just be non functioning & inaccessible, essentially shrinking the internet down even further to a blasted landscape of Twitter weirdos & Redditors locked in a forever war. What do you guys think anyway? I personally think its a good thing overall but is also a little sad to see Googles iron fisted rule over browsers cement even further.
Just to add to this non-PL, my previous employer still had internal apps that would only work on IE. In 2019.

As an added bonus, employees needed to apply through their line manager to have access to Chrome right up until 2018, when the company finally rolled Chrome out to all company PCs by default. I'm sure if I went back to my old office today, in the unlikely event that were no more IE-based apps in use, many of the boomers in my former office would still be using IE despite having had Chrome as an option for the last two years.
There are a lot of internal government web-based apps and such that STILL only work on IE. It's going to be a clusterfuck.
 
the amount of shitty little training websites, software portals (alot of hotels use a system that Oracle used to sell for bookings etc & it needs to be run through a IE frontend as the new version they made is a cloud based security hole riddled nightmare so a lot of organisations won't move to it), etc, that need old versions of HTML & ancient protocols like SSL 1.0 that are now only supported by IE is crazy.

This will also likely cause a lot of old websites to just be non functioning & inaccessible, essentially shrinking the internet down even further to a blasted landscape of Twitter weirdos & Redditors locked in a forever war.
Just to add to this non-PL, my previous employer still had internal apps that would only work on IE. In 2019.

As an added bonus, employees needed to apply through their line manager to have access to Chrome right up until 2018, when the company finally rolled Chrome out to all company PCs by default. I'm sure if I went back to my old office today, in the unlikely event that were no more IE-based apps in use, many of the boomers in my former office would still be using IE despite having had Chrome as an option for the last two years.
My mechanic was telling me about how a lot of the tablets and devices they use on cars will just straight up boot up a program in IE to diagnose a problem or to pull up the service manual. I wonder how that's going to effect them. The new tools usually run on android but I imagine they're gonna lose access to a lot of those tools.
There are a lot of internal government web-based apps and such that STILL only work on IE. It's going to be a clusterfuck.
I only have one word for all of this.
953.gif

The Corporate World is fucking retarded when it comes to technology. They will have fuckin panic attacks about "safety/security", gate people from doing even basic shit they NEED to do on computers as if they were fucking zoo animals, force people to memorize shit like HIPAA, and take mandatory retarded (and boring as fuck) tests about "safety/security".

MEANWHILE, the operating systems they use are fucked. Either they upgraded to 10, which spies on every fucking thing you do including what you type on your keyboard, making things like HIPAA not fucking matter because personal information was technically NEVER secure to begin with, or they keep Windows 7 (NOT on a VM mind you), and run the risk of being ass-fucked by anything internet related since Microsoft dropped support for it years ago, and as any retro PC gamer will tell you, if you're going to run old WinOS like XP and the like, you should NEVER EVER connect that machine to the internet unless you want instant aids.

Their business models for proprietary web-based software is also fucked. Internet Explorer is one of the least secure web browsers, not only sending the shit you go on to Microsoft, but it also tracks your physical location, so again, TECHNICALLY, personal/private data is not completely protected. Keep in mind that with most employees (ESPECIALLY boomers), IE is the ONLY browser they use, so they are also using that shit to browse their personal links on the side, and majority of those personal links are spyware-riddled ad-filled java-based bullshit, which can cause major problems like slow-downs and even computer freezes. Shit like that should be on a browser that has blocker addons to prevent that shit from happening.

Corporate needs to wake the fuck up and realize that it can't sustain itself by doing shit that worked decades ago. Times have changed. Software has changed. Operating systems have changed. Relying on shit like "licensing fees" and such is shit that's not only costly, but archaic. There are far better alternatives that actually do give a shit about "safety/security" that don't require jumping through hoops or shilling out monthly/yearly costs. Corporate needs to stop shitting it's diapers, put it's big-boy pants on, and take these changes head-on, and if they can't do that, then they are beyond fucked.
 
I only have one word for all of this.
View attachment 2194487
Corporate needs to wake the fuck up and realize that it can't sustain itself by doing shit that worked decades ago. Times have changed. Software has changed. Operating systems have changed. Relying on shit like "licensing fees" and such is shit that's not only costly, but archaic. There are far better alternatives that actually do give a shit about "safety/security" that don't require jumping through hoops or shilling out monthly/yearly costs. Corporate needs to stop shitting it's diapers, put it's big-boy pants on, and take these changes head-on, and if they can't do that, then they are beyond fucked.
The trouble is that corporations see IT as a cost centre at best and a grudge purchase at worst. Given the computing requirements of many large corporations (not just the thousands of desktops and hundreds of servers, but everything from mainframes to multfunction centres), and the cost associated, I can see why corporate bean counters hold onto systems well beyond their use-by dates.

Compounding this issue is the fact that when a system is finally replaced, it's usually replaced by the cheapest option. At best, the cheapest option may be clunky to use, thus leading to its users taking longer to complete a task. At worst... well, you can see where this is heading.

I suspect the typical ICT project manager in one of these corporations only takes into account the cost of a new system to their own cost centre. The new system adds an extra 30 minutes to each user's task compared with the previous system? And thousands of users rely on this system every day? HR pays for that, ergo not my problem.
 
A reasonable browser where? Nothing frigging works in that shit and their UI is the ugliest garbage. It’s literally IE under the hood, guaranteed. That’s how Microsoft rolls
Get with the times, it's Chrome under the hood now. And it's better at it because Google is so retarded, all their telemetry shit fucks with your ram like hell. Edge doesn't have more spy shit beyond what Windows already uses on you.

The current version of Edge "just werks" and vertical tabs are a godsend.
 
It's only still around because there is still so much industrial and enterprise shit that only works in it. Hell, I used to have to use a IP based system that is still an active product that was still using Silverlight. Sliverlight only works in IE now. And it was really retarded because what it was doing could easily be done with HTML5 and Javascript or PHP or something. It wasn't anything special.
Silverlight would have the excuse of allowing quicker development if only it hadn't been tied to the cancer that is XAML. Those retards at Microsoft should have made it WinForms on the web.
Oh dear, this is going to have further repercussions than any of you realise. Not to power level or anything but i work in IT & let me tell you the amount of shitty little training websites, software portals (alot of hotels use a system that Oracle used to sell for bookings etc & it needs to be run through a IE frontend as the new version they made is a cloud based security hole riddled nightmare so a lot of organisations won't move to it), etc, that need old versions of HTML & ancient protocols like SSL 1.0 that are now only supported by IE is crazy.

This will also likely cause a lot of old websites to just be non functioning & inaccessible, essentially shrinking the internet down even further to a blasted landscape of Twitter weirdos & Redditors locked in a forever war. What do you guys think anyway? I personally think its a good thing overall but is also a little sad to see Googles iron fisted rule over browsers cement even further.
That's fine, Windows 2000 VMs are cheap to run on modern hardware.
 
Like with most old software that's now defunct, there's no reason it needed to be axed apart from the fact it was just criminally neglected. You couldn't even install uBlock or any other browser hardening extensions to it, the best you could get was AdBlock Plus.
 
RIP niggas who still use iLO2
 
Like with most old software that's now defunct, there's no reason it needed to be axed apart from the fact it was just criminally neglected. You couldn't even install uBlock or any other browser hardening extensions to it, the best you could get was AdBlock Plus.
but it sure loved apps like "download speeder go-getter!"
 
It's sad to see EdgeHTML die, not because it was good but because we've devolved back into the IE 6 days where you get to use the One Blessed Browser or you get to eat shit. Now that everything is powered by 6MB of JS, it's even worse: you won't be dealing with odd rendering bugs like double-margin, you get a friendly error message :) :) or white screen of death.

I wonder if this will have a significant effect on Space Station 13, which requires IE11 for a good chunk of its UI, or if rolling forward to Edge (Chromium) will do the trick? I feel this is going to be the main route for a lot of healthcare/govt organizations, so they can keep instructing boomers to "get the internet from the blue E".
 
I don't even recall anyone using Internet Explorer in this day an age. I think it aged so poorly. I stopped using Internet Explorer since 2012.
 
Back