Is Microsoft working on
browser like chrome ? ?
While we had expected Microsoft to bring some
big changes to IE in Windows 10, looks like the software giant is all set to
introduce a new browser. Citing some anonymous sources, a report by ZDnet suggests that Microsoft is now
building an all new browser dubbed Spartan. This means, IE 12 and Spartan could
be different.
Spartan will reportedly be based on Microsoft’s Chakra
JavaScript engine and Microsoft’s Trident rendering engine, which means it
isn’t switching over to WebKit.
Going by the report, Windows 10 for desktop could ship
with both IE11 and Spartan. However, Spartan is simply the codename and it
isn’t clear what Microsoft would be calling it during release. The report
further adds that IE 11 will be there for backward-compatibility and Spartan
will be made available for both desktop and mobile versions of Windows 10.
Microsoft is likely to unveil Spartan on January 21 along
with the next set of Windows 10 features. “But my sources also aren’t sure if
Spartan will be functional enough for inclusion in the Windows 10 January
Technical Preview and mobile preview builds that are expected to be available
to testers in early 2015. It may not show up in the test builds until some
point later, they say,” the report said.
NeoWin reveals, “Microsoft has made a rather
large decision regarding Trident, the engine that powers the browser, and no,
it’s not adopting Webkit. The team behind the engine has forked Trident into
two components that will result in a new .DLL when the browser ships. Because
of the fork, the modern component of the IE12 should be lightweight compared to
what we have now in IE11, at least, that’s the hope because all of the legacy
base has been removed.”
The report further adds that it’s because of this fork
that rumours of a new browser are doing rounds.
Several
reports suggests that the new browser will look and feel like Chrome and
Firefox. It will also support extensions. Lately, IE that is bundled with
Windows 10, is facing stiff competition from alternatives like Chrome, Firefox
and Apple’s Safari.
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