You have always railed against Microsoft, the browser and the fact that it could only be run on a device in Windows? While the first issue has been corrected over the years, especially since the arrival of Internet Explorer 10, the second is about to be history.
See also : Microsoft opposes the Lenovo Yoga 3 Pro against Apple MacBook Air
Thus, as announced yesterday, know that you can now run the latest version of Internet Explorer on your Android or iOS device to your machine and OS X. In other words, the small luxury to launch the latest installment of the web browser the Redmond company is no longer restricted to machines running Windows 10. Microsoft has built and published something called the firm RemoteIE , which allows developers to run the preview version of the browser of the company, without requiring them to be on the latest version of Windows .
Microsoft wants developers to be able to make their websites compatible with the browser. At the same time, the company can not expect that all developers use Windows. RemoteIE, which is powered by the cloud computing platform Azure Microsoft offers a reasonable compromise.
The service is only dedicated to testing and notes that Microsoft inactive for 10 minutes sessions will be disconnected, a session may not exceed 60 minutes. You will need to start a new session RemoteIE if you want to continue .
To use the service, developers must register on the site RemoteIE and download a client application for Windows, OS X, iOS or Android. By pressing the F12 key on the keyboard, or from the browser menu, users will be able to access the development tools found in Internet Explorer.
Due to the fact that RemoteIE is based on Windows Server 2012 R2, no previous version of IE is available for testing. But Microsoft wants to address this issue, and users can use the IE compatibility modes to test the rendering of pages in previous versions. "Sorry, no IE6" , said Microsoft in the FAQ RemoteIE.
In short, regardless of your operating system or development environment, you can now quickly launch the latest version of Internet Explorer designed to run under Windows 10. If the developers will actually build on this platform remains to be seen but Microsoft is once again a step in the right direction to attract developers.
Users will not be able to change the settings of the Internet Explorer application, and Microsoft Azure session mentions that distance will not be as fast as a local copy of the browser, and will not be RemoteIE capacity access to internal URLs or pages behind a firewall.
Anyway, it seems that Microsoft is trying to respond to teasing Mozilla about a possible launch of a dedicated web browser developers.
See also : Microsoft opposes the Lenovo Yoga 3 Pro against Apple MacBook Air
Thus, as announced yesterday, know that you can now run the latest version of Internet Explorer on your Android or iOS device to your machine and OS X. In other words, the small luxury to launch the latest installment of the web browser the Redmond company is no longer restricted to machines running Windows 10. Microsoft has built and published something called the firm RemoteIE , which allows developers to run the preview version of the browser of the company, without requiring them to be on the latest version of Windows .
Microsoft wants developers to be able to make their websites compatible with the browser. At the same time, the company can not expect that all developers use Windows. RemoteIE, which is powered by the cloud computing platform Azure Microsoft offers a reasonable compromise.
The service is only dedicated to testing and notes that Microsoft inactive for 10 minutes sessions will be disconnected, a session may not exceed 60 minutes. You will need to start a new session RemoteIE if you want to continue .
To use the service, developers must register on the site RemoteIE and download a client application for Windows, OS X, iOS or Android. By pressing the F12 key on the keyboard, or from the browser menu, users will be able to access the development tools found in Internet Explorer.
Due to the fact that RemoteIE is based on Windows Server 2012 R2, no previous version of IE is available for testing. But Microsoft wants to address this issue, and users can use the IE compatibility modes to test the rendering of pages in previous versions. "Sorry, no IE6" , said Microsoft in the FAQ RemoteIE.
In short, regardless of your operating system or development environment, you can now quickly launch the latest version of Internet Explorer designed to run under Windows 10. If the developers will actually build on this platform remains to be seen but Microsoft is once again a step in the right direction to attract developers.
Users will not be able to change the settings of the Internet Explorer application, and Microsoft Azure session mentions that distance will not be as fast as a local copy of the browser, and will not be RemoteIE capacity access to internal URLs or pages behind a firewall.
Anyway, it seems that Microsoft is trying to respond to teasing Mozilla about a possible launch of a dedicated web browser developers.