What happens now if you're using Internet Explorer 8, 9 or 10. — -- Internet Explorer is dead as we know it. The ubiquitous browser, which made its debut two decades ago, has been officially put ...
They were useful at some point, but Windows has better alternatives now.
In context: Windows has included a proprietary JavaScript engine since the release of Internet Explorer 3.0 nearly 30 years ago. Technically, JScript is Microsoft's own dialect of the ...