Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 19th Oct 2006 21:13 UTC
Internet Explorer "When eWEEK Labs looked at Internet Explorer 6.0 more than five years ago, we were so disappointed in the browser that we said the only reason to upgrade to it was because it was free. That means you'd have to go back nearly nine years to find a release of the Microsoft browser that we found to be significant: IE 5.0. But with the release Oct. 18 of Internet Explorer 7, Microsoft is finally back in the Web browser game in a serious way: IE 7 takes major strides in reversing Microsoft's neglect of the flagship browser." And, surprise.
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RE[5]: Shocked and appauled
by slight on Fri 20th Oct 2006 16:47 UTC in reply to "RE[4]: Shocked and appauled"
slight
Member since:
2006-09-10

I'm sorry but you're wrong. WINE Is Not an Emulator, it maps calls to Windows functions to Linux functions.

No it's not ideal, but it is running on Linux, it's just using a library without realising it.

WINE also isn't reverse engineered Windows code, it is an implementation of the Windows APIs using Linux libraries / kernel.

No it's not ideal that it's x86 only, but that doesn't change the fact that it is technically running natively.

Flash player for Linux is native, but it still doesn't work on x86_64 because it's closed source and not compiled for x86_64, ditto for IE under WINE.

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