Microsoft Names Vista Browser IE 7+

In an entry on the IE team's blog, group product manager Tony Chor said that the new moniker would denote the Vista-only features in that OS's browser -- protected mode, parental controls, and better network diagnostics -- all of which are missing from the Windows XP version.

The two IE editions share the same code base, and except for the three Vista-specific features, are identical.

Beta 2 of both the XP and Vista versions are currently available, but the second beta for Vista won't be open to all users for several weeks, said Chor. At the moment, IE 7+ Beta 2 can be downloaded only by Vista beta testers.

User comments posted to the blog were generally unkind to the name.

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"This is nuts, you will cause more confusion with this than leaving it as IE7," wrote a user identified only as "Steve."

"I was going to say that this was a 'poor' naming decision but after about, oh, 5 seconds of thought I decided not to mince words: this is a STUPID decision, for the very reasons mentioned by other posters here," a user named "Cal Jacobson" added. "The 'plus' is merely to give the illusion that one version of IE is better than another -- thus another reason for users to upgrade to Vista."

Chor said that information about the timing of the at-large Beta 2 of IE 7+ will be posted on the blog "shortly."

The Windows XP version of IE 7 Beta 2 has been available since late April. That edition can be downloaded from here.

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