Microsoft is working on a new web browser for Windows 10,
code-named Spartan, to replace the ageing Internet Explorer. First reported by
ZDNet, Microsoft will reportedly ship both web browsers in Windows 10, to test
the waters with Spartan. Internet Explorer’s team will be downscale internally,
to the point where all workers will move to Spartan development.
Spartan
will be a lightweight web browser, capable of working on multiple platforms.
Microsoft is looking into an iOS and Android version of the web browser,
alongside making it available for all Windows platforms at launch.
Not
much is known about the design of Spartan, it will most likely follow the same
Metro UI, which Microsoft has been pushing for the best part of three years. It
will also feature the same rendering engine as Internet Explorer. Microsoft is
preparing a consumer event on January 21 for Windows 10, to introduce some of
the new features on the operating system. In a leaked Build 9901, it showed
Cortana, the virtual assistant, will be present on the OS update.
Internet
Explorer has lost a lot of its dazzle in the past few years, overshadowed by
Chrome and Firefox. Microsoft went from 80 percent web browser share to 50
percent, and only has 2 percent on mobile.
Spartan
might not be the solution to Microsoft’s web browser problems, but offering a
compatible web browser on multiple platforms is better than what Redmond is
offering right now.
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