According to a recent report by Mary Jo Foley of ZDNet, Microsoft is building a lightweight browser, codenamed "Spartan".
A
post written by Foley reveals that Spartan is "new" and "isn't
[Internet Explorer]." Her post notes that it could be set free inside of
the Windows 10 release schedule. In short, Microsoft may be building a
speedy, simpler browser that maintains use of Internet Explorer's
rendering engine.
Internet Explorer has had a
ribald history, growing from zero market share, to market-dominating
heights, to slow decline in the face of Firefox, to faster decline in
the face of Chrome, to a recent re-acceleration under a new,
standards-based approach. Its life has been bitcoin's late 2013 to date,
but stretched out over several decades.
Whether
the company's recent moves have been enough to salvage Internet
Explorer's tarnished brand, however, is open to interpretation.
Microsoft certainly wants its browser to gain market share, especially
on the new Windows 10 platform that it hopes to deploy from smartphones
all the way to televisions.
If Microsoft wants
Windows 10 to function across all platforms and wants developers to be
able to develop once and deploy everywhere, then creating a new browsing
experience that is built to handle all sorts of inputs — without the
baggage of a traditional desktop browsing experience — would be a decent
idea.
The company, in the second half of January,
is expected to release the consumer-facing preview of Windows 10 in
that window, is under some pressure here. If it fails to impress, it
will directly undercut the momentum that it has built for its new
operating system. A new browsing tool could help boost human interest in
its new platform.
Perhaps it is better to ask
ourselves what would happen to Microsoft's browsing market share long
term, if it fails to reimagine Internet Explorer.


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