Defence dept upgrades to IE7

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Australia’s Department of Defence today confirmed it will upgrade its 90,000 desktop PCs from version 6 to version 7 of Microsoft’s Internet Explorer web browser — almost four years after the software was first released.

Defence commenced the rollout of IE7 earlier this year on it’s fixed restricted network, with IE7 now deployed on the majority of user desktops,” said a Defence spokesperson, noting the rollout would affect 90,000 machines. “We are currently resolving some application compatibility issues for a small number of users.”

“Defence is planning to upgrade its overseas deployed restricted Desktops to IE7 by 2010.”

IE7 is a more modern browser than IE6, introducing new features such as the tabbed browsing made popular in rival browsers like Firefox, an anti-phishing filter and enhanced support for web standards. Microsoft reworked a number of core areas for IE7′s release — such as the rendering engine and the way the software handles security.

However, IE7 was released in October 2006 and has since been superceded by version 8 of the Microsoft browser, which was released in March 2009. Internet Explorer 9 is currently in development. In response to a question about the delay, the Defence spokesperson said “there was no business driver” to upgrade until recently.

The news comes as there is increasing pressure from employees in organisations to gain more flexibility around what browser — and software in general — they are allowed to use at work.
Technology giant IBM has recently anointed Mozilla’s Firefox browser as the default option for all of its 400,000 employees.

The Defence spokesperson said the department continued to look at alternate browsers, but the current upgrade to IE7 was to maintain compatibility for applications built on IE.

“Defence does not allow staff to install their own software including desktop browsers on Defence networks,” they added. “This restriction allows Defence to support the desktop environment and to manage security and vulnerability patches.”

Defence is not the only large Australian organisation to take its time in rolling out new versions of IE. In late February the Commonwealth Bank of Australia told staff it was shortly to upgrade to IE7. The bank has some 38,000 staff.

Image credit: Microsoft

3 COMMENTS

  1. > the Defence spokesperson said “there was no business driver” to upgrade until recently.

    Yeah, until Google got p0wned in China.

  2. It’s large corporations that are still using ie6 *cough*NSW Health*cough* that make my life as a web developer hell. I know a lot of the time when a company is still using ie 6 it’s due to compatibly reasons with their intranet. But a lot of the time it’s just idiotic control freaks in the IT department that refuse to install important updates. I honestly don’t even know how they manage to use the internet at all in ie 6, I’ve found that many websites won’t even work in it anymore.

    I also don’t understand why they are updating to ie 7. They should be going straight to ie 8, they have no reason not to considering ie 8 has the compatibility mode. I have heard some people say it doesn’t render exactly the same as ie 7 but in all the websites I’ve built I’ve checked in compatibility mode as well as ie 7 and I haven’t noticed any difference.

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