Internet Explorer 9 closes the HTML5 gap
IE9 Platform Preview 6 gains on Google Chrome and Firefox with big improvements in HTML5 compatibility and JavaScript performance
Did you feel that? Microsoft has shifted its Internet Explorer development team into higher gear and dropped another rev of the IE 9 beta, this one called Platform Preview Version 6 and touting "next generation experiences." It's all happening so fast. The new Platform Preview arrives just a few weeks after Microsoft launched a new full beta of Internet Explorer 9.
The days of rolling out a new revision every few years are long gone, as the battle for dominance among Web browsers is hotter than ever. Microsoft wants to keep its platform in the hearts of Web developers, and the simplest way to do that is to roll out newer, faster engines with more support for the new HTML5 features. Mozilla just released a new version of Firefox, claiming the fastest JavaScript performance. Google, once so shy that everything was an awe-shucks "beta," is now incrementing the version number practically every time a developer types "make." Google Chrome is up to version 7, and developers are sharing version 8.
[ HTML5 will spawn richer, more sophisticated websites while also easing development. See "How HTML5 will change the Web." | Stay up to date on the key developments in Microsoft and Windows technology with InfoWorld's Technology: Microsoft newsletter. ]
Does it make a difference that the version numbers are starting to turn as quickly as the National Debt clock? It depends upon who you are. The average Web surfer probably won't bother with Platform Preview 6 because it just shows off the rendering engine. It's only a rectangle for viewing Web pages. There are no extra buttons for juggling bookmarks or handling other browsing chores. As long as your mom or dad download a new version once or twice a year, they'll see that IE is getting zippier and the Web pages are becoming livelier.
Developers of Web pages, though, will notice several changes that illustrate how Microsoft is managing to catch up and even surpass the other browser development teams. The core engine is faster, and it is much more compliant with the HTML5 standards. While Microsoft once was content to develop its own standards and wait for the rest of the world to consider them, it's now battling to implement HTML5.
A quick survey of the features shows a steady devotion to implementing and, in some cases, extending HTML5 capabilities. The beta version of IE9 already implements some important features such as the Canvas and the video tags (H.264 only). Most of the new features in Platform Preview 6 seem to be in the area of document markup, with extra tags that illustrate the roles played. Where the HTML designer used to have to live with six types of headlines (<h1> through <h6>) and one type of paragraph, he or she can now include tags that indicate that some of the text comprises a <section> or an <aside>. Platform Preview 6 supports most of the standard elements, but not all; for example, it doesn't seem to be handling <time> yet. There's a nice demo of some of these HTML5 elements at Microsoft's website.






