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Windows 8 : Internet Explorer 10 - Tile-based IE10

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11/21/2013 8:20:56 PM

The tile-based version of Internet Explorer is meant to be an immersive experience. A website should be displayed with little or no browser interface shown onscreen, thus maximizing the content’s size. What you see in Figure 1 is the New York Times website in full-screen mode. Notice that not one interface element shows on the page.

Image

Figure 1. Metro Internet Explorer 10 full-screen mode

When you need to alter the content of the browser, a gesture will either allow you to perform an action or open an area of the screen in which you can use touch commands.

You can perform edge swipes to open an address box and enter text with the virtual keyboard; open the Charms bar to change settings; or open a panel containing tabs, recent pages, or favorites all displayed as tiles. Tile-based IE10 has corresponding mouse and keyboard equivalents, but the interface was designed with touch in mind. Menu systems are gone in the tile-based interface: When you need to make selections, a small dialog box with a limited number of choices appears.

There are a number of features built into the tile-based IE10 that make the browsing experience faster and more natural. It’s easy to take them for granted. For example, Microsoft has built in a prefetch feature that looks for the link to the next page; when you are reading a story online, tile-based IE10 takes you to the next page with a right-to-left swipe without you having to locate that next link and click it. When you enter text from the virtual keyboard, the browser predicts what your next entry might be and displays sites you have been to, displays sites that are popular, and offers word recognition and auto-correct. The goal is to get you where you want to be as quickly as possible.

Since tile-based IE and Desktop IE are not separate programs, when you create a favorite site it appears in both versions of the interface. You can pin your favorite sites or pages to the Start screen and launch the browser to that page with a single tap or click. If you log into Windows Live, your favorites, your history, and other settings are synchronized across several devices.

To scroll

• Swipe up to scroll down a page.

• Swipe down to scroll up a page.

• Use your mouse’s scroll wheel to scroll up or down a page.

• Use the page’s scroll bars to scroll up or down a page.


Tip

You may like the responsiveness of the tile-based interface but need the tools that you find in the Desktop version. If you are using a multi-monitor display, put the tile-based version on one monitor and Desktop on another.


 
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