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Hit Windows Update/Microsoft Update for the new browser.
Personal computing discussed
Moderators: renee, Flying Fox, Ryu Connor
auxy wrote:Danbooru is broken in IE10, so it's a no-go for me.
just brew it! wrote:I-it's not what you think! (。 >艸<) It's just a site that catalogues anime/manga fanart. It happens to include a bunch of adult art, but that's just a coincidence; you can filter it all out by searching rating:safe or using safebooru. It works fine in Webkit and it mostly works in IE10, but certain parts of it (picture notes) don't.If that's what I found when I Googled it... *ahem*. :wink: Well, it seems to work OK in Chrome unless I'm missing something.
just brew it! wrote:Um, well, I mean, I don't really have any feature of it I found useful. I actually removed it -- as much as one can do without hacking Windows apart, which is uninstalling it from the add/remove Windows components dialog -- from my install.If there are other features of IE10 you find useful, it might be worthwhile to install it anyway, and have another browser for sites that don't "play nice" with it?
Dieter wrote:Maybe you should give a new browser a try? Maxthon Cloud Browser is a great lesser-known browser that supports both Webkit and Trident (IE) rendering engines. It's free (gratis, not libre), lightning-fast and supports all the latest web technology doohickeys. (・∀・)Anybody else had similar issues? I have two other Win7 x64 systems I'd like to upgrade to IE10 (it fixes some MS enterprise software), but I'm going to hold off until the rendering issue is resolved.
Dieter wrote:Since upgrading my system to IE10, occasionally the fonts are messed up in Firefox. It seems that the ClearType is randomly corrupted on some text (not disabled, but wrong). If you highlight the text or if it changes due to JavaScript or something similar it instantly fixes itself. Scrolling the page does not fix it.
I'm running Firefox 19, and it was fine until I installed IE10, so I think they messed around with the subpixel rendering algorithms. I don't remember if Firefox uses their own or if they use MS's, but Firefox seems to be the only program affected so far. Crazy annoying, though.
Anybody else had similar issues? I have two other Win7 x64 systems I'd like to upgrade to IE10 (it fixes some MS enterprise software), but I'm going to hold off until the rendering issue is resolved.
JohnC wrote:So helpful! (ノ◕ヮ◕)ノ*:・゚✧https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=812695 ? Known issue, no proper fix yet...
JohnC wrote:https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=812695 ? Known issue, no proper fix yet...
auxy wrote:just brew it! wrote:If there are other features of IE10 you find useful, it might be worthwhile to install it anyway, and have another browser for sites that don't "play nice" with it?
Um, well, I mean, I don't really have any feature of it I found useful. I actually removed it -- as much as one can do without hacking Windows apart, which is uninstalling it from the add/remove Windows components dialog -- from my install.
auxy wrote:Maybe you should give a new browser a try? Maxthon Cloud Browser is a great lesser-known browser that supports both Webkit and Trident (IE) rendering engines. It's free (gratis, not libre), lightning-fast and supports all the latest web technology doohickeys. (・∀・)
Dieter wrote:Hehe, you probably did. Maxthon before version 3 was simply another front-end for Internet Explorer, as it was strictly Trident-engine. It was basically a Firefox clone with the IE renderer. Maxthon 3 brought WebKit, and a whole host of other enhancements, and the newest version, now called "cloud browser", brings even more, such as the ability to link your Maxthon account to their cloud to backup your bookmarks and stuff (ala Chrome Sync.)It sounds familiar, and I want to say I tried it a long time ago (if I'm thinking of the same thing. The name certainly is unique).
Dieter wrote:Yap. That's why I like how I can swap to Trident for troublesome sites with Maxthon. The history mentioned above is the reason it has that capability. °˖✧◝(⁰▿⁰)◜✧˖°I only use IE as a necessary evil for corporate apps or some corporate banks.