Removal of app switch button, new UI for search results, integration of touch-friendly Adobe Flash Player, Flip Ahead, "Do not track"-flag set by default, removal of legacy DX filters from all of the document modes (can be re-enabled using the Internet Options dialog), and support for (CSS transitions, transforms, animations, gradients, and CSS Fonts’ font-feature-settings property, as well as platform APIs such as the Indexed Database API (IndexedDB) and requestAnimationFrame()) in their unprefixed forms, but still supports their prefixed forms.Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) for XMLHttpRequest, CSS -ms-user-select property, CSS3 font-feature-settings property to access advanced OpenType® features, Document setting to enable floating point values in CSS-OM, HTML5 BlobBuilder API and new APIs to save or open files, HTML5 track element for HTML5 video captions, Interoperable HTML5 Quirks mode, JavaScript Typed Arrays, Meta tag to alert user that site requires ActiveX add-ons available only in desktop IE10, removal of legacy graphics features from IE10 standards mode, changes to support latest HTML5 WebSocket API, and Web Worker thread pooling.Cross-Origin Resource Sharing, File API Writer, JavaScript Typed Arrays (WebGL), CSS user select property, HTML5 Video Text Captioning, and Updated Quirks Mode.
Support for Windows 8, CSS 3D Transforms, CSS Text shadow, SVG Filter Effects, Spellchecking, Autocorrection, local storage with IndexedDB and the HTML5 Application Cache, Web Sockets, HTML5 History, and InPrivate tabs.Support for Positioned Floats, CSS stylesheet limit lifted, CSSOM Floating Point Value support, Improved hit testing APIs, Media Query Listeners, HTML5: Support for async attribute on script elements, HTML5 Drag and Drop, HTML5 File API, HTML5 Sandbox, HTML5 Web Workers, and some Web Performance APIs. Method 1 : Reinstall Internet Explorer Using Programs & Features Wait until it gives you a message that It finished and restart the computer click on Yes.Support for CSS3 multi-column layout, CSS3 grid layout, CSS3 flexible box layout, CSS3 gradients, ES5 strict mode, and a new user agent string.Then IE10 and its updates were pushed out via WSUS. On those machines when I uninstalled IE11 it reverted back to IE9. This coincided with a complete revamp of WSUS for the whole organization so about 11 machines mysteriously got IE11.
My observation was based on the fact that we were using IE9 across the board, but decided to upgrade to IE10. I was somewhat guessing as to if any of my suggestions would work for you. I appreciate M$ throwing up warnings that I should really be using IE 11 - just don't delete the danged pages when I am positive I need what I say I do! I mean, sure - who wants to willingly use IE 9? But that doesn't mean that sometimes in fringe scenarios that it's still a requirement. For an example of what I mean, follow these steps that I did:Ģ) Select "Download Internet Explorer 9", and click Next.ģ) Select either of the only options, which are Vista/Server 2008 versions.Ĥ) Expand the option for Additional Information, and try clicking on any of the links for Win 7 or Server 2008 R2.
I'm telling you though - M$'s apparent decision to flat-out delete the IE9 download pages? THAT is sketchy. I did not think to try manually removing all IE 11 & 10 updates from the machine, thus effectively downgrading to IE 9 - I'll have to play with that on the next unit, that might be a good alternative method. (And WSUS did not think the machine needs any installs afterwards, as removing IE made any IE installs or rollups not applicable.) I did initially try to remove IE 11 from "Windows Features" (boy is that a misnomer.) but that simply removed IE entirely. Hmmm, I'll have to give this a try with a test unit. If 9 then good, but if 8 and you can't find the 9 installer then you could use WSUS to go back up to 9. That would bump you down to either 9 or 8. If you are already on 10/11 you can uninstall 10 and or 11 from the Installed Updates in Programs and Features.