Supporting IE6 in a Windows 7 environment

Windows 7

Microsoft’s staged launch of Windows 7 during the latter half of 2009 has left enterprise system and network admins facing a dilemna. Is now the right time to migrate? And what are the issues?

Given the widely acknowledged lack of enthusiasm for Vista in the corporate network, this means migrating from XP — and the default browser in XP, IE6. For Microsoft, there’s no problem. IE8, integrated with Windows 7, offers “a faster, easier, safer web” (compared, we presume, to IE6 and IE7). The problem in the enterprise is that many applications were (naively) optimised for IE6, and are dependent on certain Microsoft proprietary “enhancements”… which were subsequently dropped in IE7 and IE8 as Microsoft moved to improve compliance with W3C standards.

Will migrating the desktop to Windows 7 mean re-writing enterprise applications to ensure compatibility? Is it cost-effective? Can it even be done? And if we do go through with it, can we be sure we won’t be faced with another costly re-write the next time MS updates IE?

Complicating the situation for today’s CIO even further, compatibility is now about much more than just following Microsoft’s roadmap for Internet Explorer. Your users are chosing Firefox, Safari, or Google Chrome, with terminal devices become more and more diverse — user’s own PCs or laptops from home, mobile users running an unpredictable range of smartphones, netbooks and soon to arrive slate devices. As a system administrator, you no longer have the luxury of dictating the configuration of the end-point device. You’re expected to deliver a service irrespective of user choices of platform and browser. How many IT departments have the means to test and validate corporate web-based applications against multiple browsers running on multiple end-point devices?

Fortunately there’s a secure, cost-effective and future proof answer to the issues,. A solution which allows users running Windows 7 to access IE6 optimised applications and IE8, without the need to go through any sort of context switching or reconfiguration. The solution is Virtual Browser.

Virtual Browser allows you to migrate desktop PCs to Windows 7 while offering IE6 compatibility by virtualising the browser (IE6 — or any other industry standard browser), ensuring ongoing access to IE6-optimised applications, simultaneously with support for the most recent browser releases. In practice a fully optimised browser configuration (browser release, plugins, helper applications such as Flash and Java) is hosted by the Virtual Browser server and launched on demand for each user connection. Multi-browser support made easy — find out more from one of our customers here.

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