Microsoft officials mentioned recently that the business wasn't going to push Internet Explorer (IE) 9 to people who hadn’t tested its latest browser until late June.
On April 6,
Office Professional 2007, however, I began receiving reports from users who had not installed the Release Candidate (RC) or the beta of IE9 that they were seeing IE 9 show up via Windows Update — something that wasn’t supposed to be happening yet.
Some people were none too happy about this,
Office 2010, given they had been expecting Microsoft to push the update to them — and their users (if they are administrators for larger networks) — for a couple more months. (One less disgruntled user did quip: “Better early than never. Now where’s my NoDo update?“)
Microsoft has marked the update as “important,” mentioned consumers who began seeing it today. It is being pushed to
Windows 7, Vista, Windows Server 2008,
Microsoft Office 2010 Professional, and Windows Server 2008 R2 end users,
Microsoft Office 2010 Professional, according to reports I’m getting.
The Microsoft Knowledge Base Support site does not mention that Microsoft changed plans and decided to start pushing it two months earlier than expected.
I’ve asked Microsoft what gives. Why is the firm pushing IE nine now instead of late June? No word back yet, other than a spokesperson noting “as is standard, IE9 is available on DLC (Microsoft Download Center) for customers to download it manually.”
The people from whom I’ve heard so far are not manually downloading it; they are having it pushed to them. The “published” date on the Windows Update versions is “yesterday” (April 5).
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I’m curious who else out there is seeing IE nine pushed via Windows Update, Microsoft Update and/or Windows Server Update Services. Meanwhile,
Microsoft Office 2010 Product Key, there is an IE nine blocking tool out there for admins who do not want IE nine made available to their Windows users.
Update: So here’s the explanation from Microsoft. When Microsoft officers mentioned in late March that “Online Explorer nine will not be broadly rolled out on Windows Update until the end of June,” that didn’t mean that Microsoft wouldn’t roll it out beforehand to those who weren’t testing IE9.
The March 29 blog post also stated, “Windows Update for all our Windows customers will start sometime next month and by the end of June we will have a great sense of the enthusiasm on
Windows 7 for IE9.” So those of us who interpreted the first sentence as meaning it wouldn’t go to Windows end users broadly until late June should have read the whole post (twice,perhaps).Still, there is/was no exact date in the Microsoft post as to when it would begin being pushed out to all Windows users, creating confusion.
A Microsoft spokesperson also stated that customers who are encountering IE9 on Windows Update are those who are scanning for new updates. If/when they do this, IE 9 will be “offered” to them. Consumers still must opt to download it once it is “offered.”