pcslookout
Lifer
When you uninstall Internet Explorer from Windows 7 do you still need to keep it up to date anymore or is it totally gone for good ?
As of build 7048 of Windows 7, Microsoft added the ability to safely remove Internet Explorer 8 from Windows.[2] The dependencies are not removed through this process, but the Internet Explorer executable (iexplore.exe) is removed without harming any other Windows components.
Simply installing and using another browser does not prevent third party programs and core operating system components from using IE libraries. Thus, a user who does not use IE to browse the Web can still be targeted by attacks against vulnerabilities in these libraries—for instance, via Outlook Express or the Windows Help subsystem. However, removing the IE libraries will cause these programs, and other software which depends upon them, to cease functioning or even to crash the system.
Removing Internet Explorer does have a number of consequences. Some programs bundled with Windows, such as Outlook Express, and some basic Windows components, such as Help and Support, depend on libraries installed by IE in order to function. With IE removed, they may fail to work, or exhibit unexpected behavior. Several common 3rd party applications, Intuit's Quicken being a typical example, depend heavily upon the HTML rendering components installed by the browser. For this reason, most of the IE removal utilities offer the compromise option of removing large parts of IE while still leaving behind the HTML rendering engine or "IE core," which allows many of these 3rd party applications to function normally. Also, in versions of Windows before Vista, it is also not possible to run Microsoft's Windows Update or Microsoft Update with any other browser due to the service's implementation of an ActiveX control, which no other browser supports. In Windows Vista, Windows Update is implemented as a Control Panel applet.
Since Internet Explorer's rendering engine is also used throughout Windows and with third-party applications as an embeddable component, it won't completely uninstall—only the executable is actually removed. Still, being able to finally banish IE proper from your system is a pretty good start for folks who really don't like IE.
Those never shipped.how about the European versions? isn't IE removed from them?
Those never shipped.
Thsi Wikipedia article discusses removing IE from Windows 7:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Removal_of_Internet_Explorer
It appears that I.E. libraries may be used by third-party programs, so "complete" IE removal is a bad idea. Presumably that means that the I.E. libraries need to be kept patched.
they are on technet though, which i have. been kicking around trying it tooThose never shipped.
Thsi Wikipedia article discusses removing IE from Windows 7:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Removal_of_Internet_Explorer
It appears that I.E. libraries may be used by third-party programs, so "complete" IE removal is a bad idea. Presumably that means that the I.E. libraries need to be kept patched.
I'm assuming that Windows Update will patch the .DLLs without any special effort. But maybe not if Windows Update finds I.E. gone. I don't know.
I'm assuming that Windows Update will patch the .DLLs without any special effort. But maybe not if Windows Update finds I.E. gone. I don't know.