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Security | Internet Explorer 8 takes the cake with better phishing and malware protection, as well as protection from emerging threats. | |||||||||||
Privacy | InPrivate Browsing and InPrivate Filtering help Internet Explorer 8 claim privacy victory. | |||||||||||
Ease of Use | Features like Accelerators, Web Slices and Visual Search Suggestions make Internet Explorer 8 easiest to use. | |||||||||||
Web Standards | It's a tie. Internet Explorer 8 passes more of the World Wide Web Consortium's CSS 2.1 test cases than any other browser, but Firefox 3 has more support for some evolving standards. | |||||||||||
Developer Tools | Of course Internet Explorer 8 wins this one. There's no need to install tools separately, and it offers better features like JavaScript profiling. | |||||||||||
Reliability | Only Internet Explorer 8 has both tab isolation and crash recovery features; Firefox and Chrome have one or the other. | |||||||||||
Customizability | Sure, Firefox may win in sheer number of add-ons, but many of the customizations you'd want to download for Firefox are already a part of Internet Explorer 8 – right out of the box. | |||||||||||
Compatibility | Internet Explorer 8 is more compatible with more sites on the Internet than any other browser. | |||||||||||
Manageability | Neither Firefox nor Chrome provide guidance or enterprise tools. That's just not nice. | |||||||||||
Performance | Knowing the top speed of a car doesn't tell you how fast you can drive in rush hour. To actually see the difference in page loads between all three browsers, you need slow-motion video. This one’s also a tie. |
bron bericht blogoscoped.com van Philipp Lenssen die erbij zegt:
Gotta love some old-fashioned propaganda!