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Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, a once-dominant web browser, has faced a long decline, with its usage dwindling over the years as competitors like Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox gained ground. Despite its historical significance, the browser is now obsolete, with Microsoft urging users to switch to its newer creation, Microsoft Edge.
The fall of Internet Explorer can be attributed to several factors, including its lack of innovation and slower performance compared to its rivals. In recent years, Microsoft has focused its efforts on developing Edge, which boasts enhanced speed, security, and compatibility with modern web standards.
Microsoft Edge, built on the Chromium platform, offers users a seamless browsing experience with features such as improved privacy controls and integration with the company’s ecosystem. The transition from Internet Explorer to Edge is part of Microsoft’s strategy to remain competitive in the ever-evolving digital landscape.
As technology continues to advance, the need for faster and more secure browsing solutions becomes increasingly important. Internet Explorer’s retirement marks the end of an era, but it also highlights the industry’s shift towards more robust and efficient tools for navigating the web.
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England’s cricketers will be subject to a midnight curfew for the rest of the winter following their ill discipline during the Ashes and the New Zealand tour that preceded it.
Although there will be no formal notification of rules for expected behaviour during the twin white-ball series versus Sri Lanka and next month’s Twenty20 World Cup, Daily Mail Sport understands they will be reminded of their responsibilities as international sportsmen upon arrival in Colombo.
One guideline that Harry Brook’s squad, who were due to fly out of London on Sunday, will have to adhere to, however, is ensuring that they are back on team hotel premises before 12am daily unless agreed otherwise in advance.
Multiple drinking incidents blighted the 3-0 one-day whitewashing by New Zealand and 4-1 capitulation in five Test matches across seven weeks in Australia.
During a six-day mid-series Ashes break in Noosa compared to a stag do by some witnesses, video footage emerged of an inebriated Ben Duckett seemingly uncertain of either where he was or where he needed to get to late at night.
There were also reports of high alcohol consumption by England players during their time in Perth, where they stayed in a casino complex hotel.
Harry Brook was fined the maximum £30,000 following an altercation with a nightclub bouncer
Video footage emerged online of England batsman Ben Duckett drunk in Australia last month
Then there was the matter of Brook being fined the maximum £30,000, and coming close to losing the white-ball captaincy, following an altercation with a nightclub bouncer hours before the third and final ODI defeat by the Black Caps in Wellington.
Others present at the scene were not named, after Brook self-reported himself to the team management, but images of a group of players at a roof top bar did the rounds on social media.
One school of thought is that such incidents would have been avoided if a midnight curfew had been in place, as it used to be before Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum took over the running of the Test team four years ago
Rob Key’s predecessor as managing director of cricket, Andrew Strauss, brought the curfew in after an alleged head-butt by Jonny Bairstow on Australia’s Cameron Bancroft in the lead-up to the 2017-18 Ashes.
But Stokes and McCullum scrapped it, believing players should be free to make their own life choices.
While treating them like adults back-fired in Australasia, the England hierarchy are also wary of creating the kind of siege mentality that developed during Covid series between 2020-22, as they attempt to put a wretched run of results behind them by winning a fourth global title against the odds in early March.