written by on 29/02/2012
I am an average computer user. Not tech expert, but have some general user knowledge. Have several computers using IE9 or late IE8.
One key part of using browsers for me is the Search capability. Previous IE browsers have had a seach window in top right corner. We have always set our default Search engine as Google, with our second choice being Wikipedia.
Now, with IE9, (and IE8 upgrades) we find Google has disappeared and Microsoft thrusts upon us "Bing" or "Windows Live" search... both as I understand it, being Microsoft products, and both inferior to Google and Wikipedia.
So, I tried to replace Bing with Google and Wikipedia, which was easy to do in earlier versions of Internet Explorer. Now, it seems very difficult. It seems you can only do this through "Add-Ons"... (selecting from an Add-on panel) and Microsoft determines what goes into the panel in the first place.
After a lot of chasing around, I was eventially able to get Google installed as my search engine of choice .. but never able to get Wikipedia installed.. it just was not presented in the Add-Ons. Now, it may be that an expert can easily do this.. but I don't have the time to try to become expert.
It seems to me that Microsoft has deliberately made this difficult in current releases of IE so as to thrust their inferior products (Bing and Live Search) down our throats whether we like it or not. For me, not acceptable.. I'm dumping IE, and evaluating Firefox, Chrome and other browsers.