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Oliver Williams
Oliver Williams

Posted on • Edited on

Internet Explorer finally dies

I’ve written about the death of Internet Explorer before over on CSS Tricks and A List Apart, perhaps prematurely, but we’ve finally reached a tipping point.

The majority of popular JavaScript frameworks have already dropped support:

The React framework itself does offer support for IE11 but some projects popular in the React ecosystem have dropped the browser. For example version 5 of MobX, released a few years ago, and the animation library Framer Motion. React dropped support for Internet Explorer with the release of version 18.

Bootstrap, still the most popular CSS framework, officially dropped support for IE with the release of Bootstrap 5. Tailwind, another popular CSS library, also dropped support for IE11 with the release of version 2.

WordPress dropped support with the release of version 5.8. Drupal will drop support with the forthcoming release of Drupal 10.

The list of companies that have dropped support is growing by the day, and includes: Adobe, Dailymotion, Skillshare, LinkedIn, Twitter, SAP, among many others.

Many of Microsoft's own products have already dropped support: Microsoft Teams web app ended support in November 2020. Microsoft 365 apps and services dropped support on August, 2021.

Windows 11 does not include Internet Explorer. On Windows 10 Internet Explorer 11 will be retired and go out of support on June 15, 2022.

Senior Director of Engineering at GoDaddy tweeted back in 2020: “We dropped support @GoDaddy for IE11 in April. We've seen 25% bundle size reductions since targeting modern JavaScript for transpilation”

It is now Safari that is the major outlier. Few users are stuck on old versions of Chrome or Firefox, but plenty of users get stuck on old versions of iOS.

Latest comments (26)

 
hypeddev profile image
Oliver Williams

Even if it is true that some apps don’t run properly in Edge IE compat mode (can’t say I have much experience tbh) surely you could just use Internet Explorer when you need to access those web apps, and then use another browser for everything else?

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rgbink profile image
Anthony DeCrescenzo

Your IT Dept should be in absolute control of that, no? When I managed IT the image was the image and it was up to me to make sure defaults were set. And if it was an older workstation it could be pushed remotely.

¯_(ツ)_/¯
Just saying.

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peterwitham profile image
Peter Witham

I am not going to miss IE. But sadly as others have said, anyone that develops for a company of a size to have IT and managed Windows machines will still have to deal with it for a while until Microsoft stops supporting those OS' that have it at the core.

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natedolesh profile image
Nate Dolesh

Let's remember Edge is a competitive and fully capable browser. It's based off Chromium now and is my preferred browser in fact.

 
hypeddev profile image
Oliver Williams

That is the reason there is a IE compatibility mode in Edge.

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asoggetti profile image
asoggetti

DIE BITCH!!

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__manucodes profile image
manu

Thank god this browser will die soon!

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__manucodes profile image
manu

IE mainly has been replaced with microsoft edge, IIRC

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adam_cyclones profile image
Adam Crockett 🌀

I have waited years for this, I'm kind of going to miss it

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blogging_idol profile image
BloggingIdol

I don't want to see it anymore