For example Markdown Monster, Help Builder and WebSurge rely heavily on the Web Browser Control to render their document centric or even rich interactive UI (in the case of Markdown Monster which hosts an HTML editor). I use the Internet Explorer Web Browser Control in a lot of my desktop applications to display document content. RemoteIE is impressive.Updated Aug 26th, 2016 - the original was published in May 2011 Microsoft is considering other versions but this will become increasingly unnecessary given that IE8 usage has dropped below 5%. That’s the most useful version but it’s normally well-behaved and you’ll experience far fewer issues than IE8.
I guess this is technically possible given it can be run on Android and Mac OS but it’s not available at the time of writing.
You won’t be permitted to access the settings or install add-ons, but it’s fast and ideal for quick site testing.
It’s a full version of the browser with access to the F12 developer tools.
You’ll be presented with an “IE Technical Preview” icon:ĭouble-click it to launch the Windows 10 Preview edition of Internet Explorer: You can then launch RemoteApp and sign in with the Microsoft account you used to register. This is typically around 15MB it varies from device to device but need only be installed once. You can then download the Azure RemoteApp which is available for Windows (32 and 64-bit), Windows RT, Mac OS, iOS iPhone, iOS iPad, and Android. You’ll then need to wait for your RemoteIE access to be approved - I received an email after a couple of hours. You may already use one if you use Windows 8+, OneDrive, or. To start, visit and sign in with a Microsoft account. The free service is currently in beta but it works and is technically stunning! Getting Started RemoteIE allows you to run the latest version of Internet Explorer from the cloud on Windows, Mac, iOS, or Android without having to install or manage a virtual machine. It’s not conducive to quick and dirty testing and, somewhat understandably, many developers don’t bother.įortunately, Microsoft has created a faster, slicker option. To their credit, Microsoft provide a range of VM images at modern.ie but the downloads can be several Gigabytes in size because they include the whole OS stack. The most viable option is to use another PC or install the OS/browser in a virtual machine environment such as VirtualBox, VMware or Hyper-V. Services such as BrowserStack can help but are only suitable for basic testing because it’s difficult to use developer tools. Windows/Linux users cannot install Safari and Mac/Linux users cannot install Internet Explorer. It’s laborious and our efforts are thwarted by the availability of browsers on our OS of choice. Ideally, Safari and a few mobile iOS and Android browsers would complete the job. At the absolute minimum, that means Chrome/Opera, Firefox, and Internet Explorer. Web developers have a duty to ensure their shiny new web site or application works on a variety of browsers.