Well IE 7 has shown it’s face and is, in my opinion, more flashy junk.

As this crap for code piece of software is still tied directly to the OS, users are still vunerable as with previous versions.

I think the cutesy programmers at microsoft would better serve the customer base (and the rest of us from their continous infection prone software) if they spent more time fixing their code and less time hiding “secret code” which shows a bunch of crappy graphics that has nothing to do with the operation of the computer.

Robert Vamosi of cnet reviewed this software and gave it a 7 out of 10, while his readers gave it a 5.3 out of 10, he suggests you use Firefox.

The good: IE 7 includes built-in tabbed browsing; antiphishing technology; an RSS reader; and a redesigned Favorites Center.

The bad: IE 7 is limited to Windows XP SP2 users only; installation requires reboot; reuses old IE 6 code and doesn’t yet comply with current Web standards; doesn’t match all the features found in Firefox or Opera; carries a Microsoft legacy of not patching its IE flaws quickly enough.

The bottom line: IE 7 was Microsoft’s one chance to leapfrog ahead of the competition, but the company has only barely caught sight of the current front-runners. For more features and greater security, switch to Mozilla Firefox.