Microsoft released on Friday a nearly completed version of its browser Internet Explorer 9, which he said has improvements that will make better use of a computer processor to enjoy faster multimedia content sites.  
Issue 9 of the program is downloaded for free internet on computers with operating systems Windows Vista and Windows 7. Not compatible with Windows XP.
In developing the new version, Microsoft followed the visual style of the Google browser,
 Chrome. Explorer 9 has fewer buttons, icons and toolbars on the screen,
 leaving more room for the content of web sites.
 It also incorporates 
some features of Windows 7, the latest operating system company, as that
 allows a website to set the taskbar at the base of the screen for a 
shortcut to it.
 25 million people tested the beta 
version of the program, according to Microsoft, and their comments led 
to changes such as the possibility of a new row of tabs above the normal
 and the reduction of the notifications that appear.
25 million people tested the beta 
version of the program, according to Microsoft, and their comments led 
to changes such as the possibility of a new row of tabs above the normal
 and the reduction of the notifications that appear.
Besides cosmetic changes, Explorer 9 leverages multicore microprocessors for faster processing source code
 web sites. It also uses the graphics processing unit of the computer 
for the videos and other visual objects to load and play faster.
Microsoft said on Thursday it had improved various aspects of the browser
 to run faster than the beta version, released in September. One was the
 presentation of JavaScript code, a language widely used on the 
Internet. In addition, the browser decide on the fly if need to resort to graphics processor for speed.

 
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