I would be very interested in reading some of your work as a journalist. I hope that you are getting paid by Microsoft, or getting paid well for all that you do here too help so many people day in and day out for years. I live on SSI but I will before the month is up, get Pay Pal and donate what I can when I can. I noticed just recently that you take donations with a membership with bit coins or Pay Pal. I don’t know where you find the time for this awesome site and blog with being a journalist besides that and I’m sure many other things going on in your life, but I am so grateful for sticking it out with me and solving this huge problem. All is back too normal just like it was when I bought my computer. As soon I made these small but important changes, I had my IE 10 back too the way it was with MSN as my homepage and all my favorites that I originally imported too Google Chrome, were still in the same place. It kept saying this page can’t be accessed early. I went into another part of my control panel, don’t remember where and I checked off, make Internet Explorer my default browser, let me know if it is not and one other minor change. So I went into my control panel, I went to Internet Options and changed the homepage too Internet Explorer but that didn’t work. I had no Internet Explorer icon, it wasn’t in my ADD/UNINSTALL area, but it did appear in the Update area. I did notice that I got IE 8 as you predicted, then I did what you said, I downloaded and installed IE 10 and I got it. above that starts with,” Sandy, you need too do this and nothing else,” was successful. Well,there’s more than one way to do this.I’ll try the ‘keep it simple’ approach so anyone can follow it.And that’s it - Internet Explorer 11 is now uninstalled on your computer! Hope this helped you! It is recommended to update the browser if your operating system supports it even if you do not use it as your main web browser - or at all. Side note: IE 11 will only be made available for Windows 7 and newer operating systems, and not for Vista or Windows XP. You can consult our release preview review for additional details about Internet Explorer 11. The browser offers better performance and web standards support, and while it does not reach Firefox or Chrome levels yet, it is closing in on those browsers with every release that Microsoft makes. If you compare it to Internet Explorer 9 or 10, you will notice that things have improved considerably. In fact, the browser performed as well as the release preview in benchmark and compatibility tests suggesting that it is more or less the same version. Microsoft has not made an official announcement yet, but there do not seem to be many changes to the Release Preview. The system needs to be restarted after the installation to complete the process. DirectX 9 compatible graphics device with WDDM driver.16 GB or 20 GB of hard disk space for 32-bit or 64-bit systems.1 GB or 2 GB of RAM for 32-bit or 64-bit operating systems.The only supported operating system listed on the website is Windows 8.1. The system requirements on the Windows website have not been updated yet. ![]() Note: The installer may need to download components from the Internet despite its large size of about 56 Megabyte. If you do not want that, uncheck the option before you click on the get Internet Explorer 11 button on the download website. You may also want to make sure that you want to use Bing as your default search engine and MSN as your default homepage in Internet Explorer. Please note that you may need to change the display language first if you do not want to install the US-English version of Internet Explorer 11. ![]() The final version of Internet Explorer 11 for Windows 7 can be downloaded from this page currently. Windows 7 users who have installed the Developer Preview or the Release Preview of Internet Explorer 11 on Windows have not received updates automatically at the time of writing, and it is likely that updates will being to roll out in the coming days to users who have enabled automatic updates in the web browser. ![]() The browser, originally released as part of the Windows 8.1 upgrade to the company's most recent client operating system Windows 8, is now also available for Microsoft's most popular operating system market share wise.
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