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Is it possible to run Internet Explorer on OS X El Capitan?
Is it still possible to run Safari 6 in 32bit on MacOS 10.8?Legally run IE for testing via Parallels on Mac, _without_ buying Windows?Unable to install Internet Explorer on MAC OS X 10.7.4What is a painless and free way to test Internet Explorer 10 on a Mac?VirtualBox No Internet Win7 Host, OS X GuestTurn Internet Sharing off automatically when on specific networkOriginal El Capitan 10.11.0?How do I view the page source in Safari just like I can in Windows Internet Explorer?How to install Internet Explorer on Mac OS X 10.11.6 ( EL Captain OS )?Reinstall El Capitan on 2009 iMac
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I need to connect to the website dictate.it, which says it only works with Internet Explorer.
Is it possible to find versions of IE to run somehow within macOS?
macos el-capitan internet-explorer
New contributor
add a comment |
I need to connect to the website dictate.it, which says it only works with Internet Explorer.
Is it possible to find versions of IE to run somehow within macOS?
macos el-capitan internet-explorer
New contributor
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– bmike♦
3 hours ago
add a comment |
I need to connect to the website dictate.it, which says it only works with Internet Explorer.
Is it possible to find versions of IE to run somehow within macOS?
macos el-capitan internet-explorer
New contributor
I need to connect to the website dictate.it, which says it only works with Internet Explorer.
Is it possible to find versions of IE to run somehow within macOS?
macos el-capitan internet-explorer
macos el-capitan internet-explorer
New contributor
New contributor
edited 2 hours ago
bmike♦
161k46290628
161k46290628
New contributor
asked 18 hours ago
Sara PrunedduSara Pruneddu
713
713
New contributor
New contributor
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– bmike♦
3 hours ago
add a comment |
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– bmike♦
3 hours ago
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– bmike♦
3 hours ago
Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– bmike♦
3 hours ago
add a comment |
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
You can use a virtual machine and then use the images provided by Microsoft for use in testing older versions of IE. Requires no cost and you can delete it when you've finished using the site.
For free you can use VirtualBox, and then use one of the images from Microsoft.
New contributor
8
“Requires no licensing”—not correct; the licence, as you say, is “for use in testing”. Other uses are unauthorised.
– eggyal
16 hours ago
@eggyal true - changed it to 'no cost'. I think the license implications for a single person using it to fill out a form that requires IE (assuming this isn't a commercial setting) are minimal.
– Ryan McDonough
15 hours ago
1
My point really was that the OP’s intended use may not fall within that which is permitted under the licence, irrespective of the cost.
– eggyal
15 hours ago
@eggyal Yeah, I understand your point.
– Ryan McDonough
14 hours ago
add a comment |
An alternative to virtualization (which is already covered in other answer) would be to use a Windows runtime environment emulation such as Wine (free & open-source).
PlayOnMac, the Mac version of PlayOnLinux, is a free graphical frontend for Wine and provides configuration templates to run the windows version of Internet Explorer.
Alternatively, you can also install and setup Wine manually. It's mostly dedicated for advanced system administrator but there is a packaged commercial front-end called CrossOver with customer support if you have some money to spend.
Although those solutions have a lot of benefits (no virtual machine, no Windows license needed, no cost), they may be really tricky to set up if it doesn't work out-of-the-box. In which case a windows virtual machine may be the easier way to go.
Edit: I managed to run Internet Explorer 8 on macOS Mojave using the trial version of CrossOver :
It may very well be the best solution if PlayOnMac doesn't work and you don't have the technical background necessary to setup Wine manually and you don't want to spend ~$200 on a Parallel Desktop + Windows 10 VM solution.
IE should work out of the box, though.
– user2531336
13 hours ago
@user2531336 I just tried on macOS Mojave (10.14.4) with the last version of PlayOnMac and didn't manage to get IE8 to work using the most recent template, installation was stuck on "extracting file updateiesetup.exe". I'm sure it's possible to make it work with a bit of tweaking but it would require some time and knowledge of wine to troubleshoot. I still think it's the best overall solution but probably not for everyone, including OP.
– zakinster
13 hours ago
Wine comes out of the box with Internet Explorer built-in. Just typewine iexplore
into Terminal and hit enter.
– numbermaniac
3 hours ago
add a comment |
You could try to use some of the cloud tools that provide access to browsers via their service.
Essentially you create an account with one of these services, and through their dashboard you can access a list of browsers that you can control through your own browser.
One such example would be BrowserStack who have partnered with Microsoft to allow developers to test freely on Edge. They have a free plan which will allow you to access Internet Explorer and get your job done.
There are other providers too that you could consider: Sauce Labs, Cross Browser Testing, Browser Ling
Disclaimer: I used to be a BrowserStack employee
add a comment |
You have a few options:
VM software and an IEDev image. Microsoft provides free (time-limited) versions of Windows with IE in the form of virtual machine images. You can get them here: https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-edge/tools/vms/
Install IE using WINE. The WINE project is a Windows compatibility layer for Unix-like systems including macOS. It's free but installing IE can be a pain. You can use tools like Winetricks to make installation easier. Good if you need an earlier version of IE than Microsoft's official solutions provide.
Change your useragent. In many cases, it used to be that most web browsers would work fine (or at least be operable) on sites optimised for IE only. However, developers couldn't be bothered to support anything outside of IE and would simply put a useragent-based whitelist in place. If you spoof your useragent to be IE, you might still be able to use the site. You can find many extensions for this in Firefox and Chrome/Chromium.
New contributor
All of this was already mentioned in other answers with more details. New answers should add new solutions.
– Alexandre Aubrey
10 hours ago
2
@AlexandreAubrey Maybe I missed one, but I don't see any other answers suggesting spoofing your useragent (which is probably the easiest solution if it works).
– John Montgomery
6 hours ago
As for option 2, Wine comes with a version of Internet Explorer built-in.wine iexplore
in Terminal.
– numbermaniac
3 hours ago
add a comment |
Buy Parallels, buy Windows, install Parallels, install Windows, and now you can run Windows applications inside MacOSX, including Windows internals like Internet Explorer if I'm not mistaken.
Costs a few hundred dollars total, but you now have Windows running inside MacOSX and can run most Windows software directly. Some exceptions exist, especially late versions of DirectX and OpenGL aren't supported because of restrictions imposed by OSX (Apple's stonewalling on providing an up to date OpenGL implementation).
add a comment |
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
You can use a virtual machine and then use the images provided by Microsoft for use in testing older versions of IE. Requires no cost and you can delete it when you've finished using the site.
For free you can use VirtualBox, and then use one of the images from Microsoft.
New contributor
8
“Requires no licensing”—not correct; the licence, as you say, is “for use in testing”. Other uses are unauthorised.
– eggyal
16 hours ago
@eggyal true - changed it to 'no cost'. I think the license implications for a single person using it to fill out a form that requires IE (assuming this isn't a commercial setting) are minimal.
– Ryan McDonough
15 hours ago
1
My point really was that the OP’s intended use may not fall within that which is permitted under the licence, irrespective of the cost.
– eggyal
15 hours ago
@eggyal Yeah, I understand your point.
– Ryan McDonough
14 hours ago
add a comment |
You can use a virtual machine and then use the images provided by Microsoft for use in testing older versions of IE. Requires no cost and you can delete it when you've finished using the site.
For free you can use VirtualBox, and then use one of the images from Microsoft.
New contributor
8
“Requires no licensing”—not correct; the licence, as you say, is “for use in testing”. Other uses are unauthorised.
– eggyal
16 hours ago
@eggyal true - changed it to 'no cost'. I think the license implications for a single person using it to fill out a form that requires IE (assuming this isn't a commercial setting) are minimal.
– Ryan McDonough
15 hours ago
1
My point really was that the OP’s intended use may not fall within that which is permitted under the licence, irrespective of the cost.
– eggyal
15 hours ago
@eggyal Yeah, I understand your point.
– Ryan McDonough
14 hours ago
add a comment |
You can use a virtual machine and then use the images provided by Microsoft for use in testing older versions of IE. Requires no cost and you can delete it when you've finished using the site.
For free you can use VirtualBox, and then use one of the images from Microsoft.
New contributor
You can use a virtual machine and then use the images provided by Microsoft for use in testing older versions of IE. Requires no cost and you can delete it when you've finished using the site.
For free you can use VirtualBox, and then use one of the images from Microsoft.
New contributor
edited 15 hours ago
New contributor
answered 17 hours ago
Ryan McDonoughRyan McDonough
28916
28916
New contributor
New contributor
8
“Requires no licensing”—not correct; the licence, as you say, is “for use in testing”. Other uses are unauthorised.
– eggyal
16 hours ago
@eggyal true - changed it to 'no cost'. I think the license implications for a single person using it to fill out a form that requires IE (assuming this isn't a commercial setting) are minimal.
– Ryan McDonough
15 hours ago
1
My point really was that the OP’s intended use may not fall within that which is permitted under the licence, irrespective of the cost.
– eggyal
15 hours ago
@eggyal Yeah, I understand your point.
– Ryan McDonough
14 hours ago
add a comment |
8
“Requires no licensing”—not correct; the licence, as you say, is “for use in testing”. Other uses are unauthorised.
– eggyal
16 hours ago
@eggyal true - changed it to 'no cost'. I think the license implications for a single person using it to fill out a form that requires IE (assuming this isn't a commercial setting) are minimal.
– Ryan McDonough
15 hours ago
1
My point really was that the OP’s intended use may not fall within that which is permitted under the licence, irrespective of the cost.
– eggyal
15 hours ago
@eggyal Yeah, I understand your point.
– Ryan McDonough
14 hours ago
8
8
“Requires no licensing”—not correct; the licence, as you say, is “for use in testing”. Other uses are unauthorised.
– eggyal
16 hours ago
“Requires no licensing”—not correct; the licence, as you say, is “for use in testing”. Other uses are unauthorised.
– eggyal
16 hours ago
@eggyal true - changed it to 'no cost'. I think the license implications for a single person using it to fill out a form that requires IE (assuming this isn't a commercial setting) are minimal.
– Ryan McDonough
15 hours ago
@eggyal true - changed it to 'no cost'. I think the license implications for a single person using it to fill out a form that requires IE (assuming this isn't a commercial setting) are minimal.
– Ryan McDonough
15 hours ago
1
1
My point really was that the OP’s intended use may not fall within that which is permitted under the licence, irrespective of the cost.
– eggyal
15 hours ago
My point really was that the OP’s intended use may not fall within that which is permitted under the licence, irrespective of the cost.
– eggyal
15 hours ago
@eggyal Yeah, I understand your point.
– Ryan McDonough
14 hours ago
@eggyal Yeah, I understand your point.
– Ryan McDonough
14 hours ago
add a comment |
An alternative to virtualization (which is already covered in other answer) would be to use a Windows runtime environment emulation such as Wine (free & open-source).
PlayOnMac, the Mac version of PlayOnLinux, is a free graphical frontend for Wine and provides configuration templates to run the windows version of Internet Explorer.
Alternatively, you can also install and setup Wine manually. It's mostly dedicated for advanced system administrator but there is a packaged commercial front-end called CrossOver with customer support if you have some money to spend.
Although those solutions have a lot of benefits (no virtual machine, no Windows license needed, no cost), they may be really tricky to set up if it doesn't work out-of-the-box. In which case a windows virtual machine may be the easier way to go.
Edit: I managed to run Internet Explorer 8 on macOS Mojave using the trial version of CrossOver :
It may very well be the best solution if PlayOnMac doesn't work and you don't have the technical background necessary to setup Wine manually and you don't want to spend ~$200 on a Parallel Desktop + Windows 10 VM solution.
IE should work out of the box, though.
– user2531336
13 hours ago
@user2531336 I just tried on macOS Mojave (10.14.4) with the last version of PlayOnMac and didn't manage to get IE8 to work using the most recent template, installation was stuck on "extracting file updateiesetup.exe". I'm sure it's possible to make it work with a bit of tweaking but it would require some time and knowledge of wine to troubleshoot. I still think it's the best overall solution but probably not for everyone, including OP.
– zakinster
13 hours ago
Wine comes out of the box with Internet Explorer built-in. Just typewine iexplore
into Terminal and hit enter.
– numbermaniac
3 hours ago
add a comment |
An alternative to virtualization (which is already covered in other answer) would be to use a Windows runtime environment emulation such as Wine (free & open-source).
PlayOnMac, the Mac version of PlayOnLinux, is a free graphical frontend for Wine and provides configuration templates to run the windows version of Internet Explorer.
Alternatively, you can also install and setup Wine manually. It's mostly dedicated for advanced system administrator but there is a packaged commercial front-end called CrossOver with customer support if you have some money to spend.
Although those solutions have a lot of benefits (no virtual machine, no Windows license needed, no cost), they may be really tricky to set up if it doesn't work out-of-the-box. In which case a windows virtual machine may be the easier way to go.
Edit: I managed to run Internet Explorer 8 on macOS Mojave using the trial version of CrossOver :
It may very well be the best solution if PlayOnMac doesn't work and you don't have the technical background necessary to setup Wine manually and you don't want to spend ~$200 on a Parallel Desktop + Windows 10 VM solution.
IE should work out of the box, though.
– user2531336
13 hours ago
@user2531336 I just tried on macOS Mojave (10.14.4) with the last version of PlayOnMac and didn't manage to get IE8 to work using the most recent template, installation was stuck on "extracting file updateiesetup.exe". I'm sure it's possible to make it work with a bit of tweaking but it would require some time and knowledge of wine to troubleshoot. I still think it's the best overall solution but probably not for everyone, including OP.
– zakinster
13 hours ago
Wine comes out of the box with Internet Explorer built-in. Just typewine iexplore
into Terminal and hit enter.
– numbermaniac
3 hours ago
add a comment |
An alternative to virtualization (which is already covered in other answer) would be to use a Windows runtime environment emulation such as Wine (free & open-source).
PlayOnMac, the Mac version of PlayOnLinux, is a free graphical frontend for Wine and provides configuration templates to run the windows version of Internet Explorer.
Alternatively, you can also install and setup Wine manually. It's mostly dedicated for advanced system administrator but there is a packaged commercial front-end called CrossOver with customer support if you have some money to spend.
Although those solutions have a lot of benefits (no virtual machine, no Windows license needed, no cost), they may be really tricky to set up if it doesn't work out-of-the-box. In which case a windows virtual machine may be the easier way to go.
Edit: I managed to run Internet Explorer 8 on macOS Mojave using the trial version of CrossOver :
It may very well be the best solution if PlayOnMac doesn't work and you don't have the technical background necessary to setup Wine manually and you don't want to spend ~$200 on a Parallel Desktop + Windows 10 VM solution.
An alternative to virtualization (which is already covered in other answer) would be to use a Windows runtime environment emulation such as Wine (free & open-source).
PlayOnMac, the Mac version of PlayOnLinux, is a free graphical frontend for Wine and provides configuration templates to run the windows version of Internet Explorer.
Alternatively, you can also install and setup Wine manually. It's mostly dedicated for advanced system administrator but there is a packaged commercial front-end called CrossOver with customer support if you have some money to spend.
Although those solutions have a lot of benefits (no virtual machine, no Windows license needed, no cost), they may be really tricky to set up if it doesn't work out-of-the-box. In which case a windows virtual machine may be the easier way to go.
Edit: I managed to run Internet Explorer 8 on macOS Mojave using the trial version of CrossOver :
It may very well be the best solution if PlayOnMac doesn't work and you don't have the technical background necessary to setup Wine manually and you don't want to spend ~$200 on a Parallel Desktop + Windows 10 VM solution.
edited 13 hours ago
answered 15 hours ago
zakinsterzakinster
25916
25916
IE should work out of the box, though.
– user2531336
13 hours ago
@user2531336 I just tried on macOS Mojave (10.14.4) with the last version of PlayOnMac and didn't manage to get IE8 to work using the most recent template, installation was stuck on "extracting file updateiesetup.exe". I'm sure it's possible to make it work with a bit of tweaking but it would require some time and knowledge of wine to troubleshoot. I still think it's the best overall solution but probably not for everyone, including OP.
– zakinster
13 hours ago
Wine comes out of the box with Internet Explorer built-in. Just typewine iexplore
into Terminal and hit enter.
– numbermaniac
3 hours ago
add a comment |
IE should work out of the box, though.
– user2531336
13 hours ago
@user2531336 I just tried on macOS Mojave (10.14.4) with the last version of PlayOnMac and didn't manage to get IE8 to work using the most recent template, installation was stuck on "extracting file updateiesetup.exe". I'm sure it's possible to make it work with a bit of tweaking but it would require some time and knowledge of wine to troubleshoot. I still think it's the best overall solution but probably not for everyone, including OP.
– zakinster
13 hours ago
Wine comes out of the box with Internet Explorer built-in. Just typewine iexplore
into Terminal and hit enter.
– numbermaniac
3 hours ago
IE should work out of the box, though.
– user2531336
13 hours ago
IE should work out of the box, though.
– user2531336
13 hours ago
@user2531336 I just tried on macOS Mojave (10.14.4) with the last version of PlayOnMac and didn't manage to get IE8 to work using the most recent template, installation was stuck on "extracting file updateiesetup.exe". I'm sure it's possible to make it work with a bit of tweaking but it would require some time and knowledge of wine to troubleshoot. I still think it's the best overall solution but probably not for everyone, including OP.
– zakinster
13 hours ago
@user2531336 I just tried on macOS Mojave (10.14.4) with the last version of PlayOnMac and didn't manage to get IE8 to work using the most recent template, installation was stuck on "extracting file updateiesetup.exe". I'm sure it's possible to make it work with a bit of tweaking but it would require some time and knowledge of wine to troubleshoot. I still think it's the best overall solution but probably not for everyone, including OP.
– zakinster
13 hours ago
Wine comes out of the box with Internet Explorer built-in. Just type
wine iexplore
into Terminal and hit enter.– numbermaniac
3 hours ago
Wine comes out of the box with Internet Explorer built-in. Just type
wine iexplore
into Terminal and hit enter.– numbermaniac
3 hours ago
add a comment |
You could try to use some of the cloud tools that provide access to browsers via their service.
Essentially you create an account with one of these services, and through their dashboard you can access a list of browsers that you can control through your own browser.
One such example would be BrowserStack who have partnered with Microsoft to allow developers to test freely on Edge. They have a free plan which will allow you to access Internet Explorer and get your job done.
There are other providers too that you could consider: Sauce Labs, Cross Browser Testing, Browser Ling
Disclaimer: I used to be a BrowserStack employee
add a comment |
You could try to use some of the cloud tools that provide access to browsers via their service.
Essentially you create an account with one of these services, and through their dashboard you can access a list of browsers that you can control through your own browser.
One such example would be BrowserStack who have partnered with Microsoft to allow developers to test freely on Edge. They have a free plan which will allow you to access Internet Explorer and get your job done.
There are other providers too that you could consider: Sauce Labs, Cross Browser Testing, Browser Ling
Disclaimer: I used to be a BrowserStack employee
add a comment |
You could try to use some of the cloud tools that provide access to browsers via their service.
Essentially you create an account with one of these services, and through their dashboard you can access a list of browsers that you can control through your own browser.
One such example would be BrowserStack who have partnered with Microsoft to allow developers to test freely on Edge. They have a free plan which will allow you to access Internet Explorer and get your job done.
There are other providers too that you could consider: Sauce Labs, Cross Browser Testing, Browser Ling
Disclaimer: I used to be a BrowserStack employee
You could try to use some of the cloud tools that provide access to browsers via their service.
Essentially you create an account with one of these services, and through their dashboard you can access a list of browsers that you can control through your own browser.
One such example would be BrowserStack who have partnered with Microsoft to allow developers to test freely on Edge. They have a free plan which will allow you to access Internet Explorer and get your job done.
There are other providers too that you could consider: Sauce Labs, Cross Browser Testing, Browser Ling
Disclaimer: I used to be a BrowserStack employee
answered 15 hours ago
SinsteinSinstein
1167
1167
add a comment |
add a comment |
You have a few options:
VM software and an IEDev image. Microsoft provides free (time-limited) versions of Windows with IE in the form of virtual machine images. You can get them here: https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-edge/tools/vms/
Install IE using WINE. The WINE project is a Windows compatibility layer for Unix-like systems including macOS. It's free but installing IE can be a pain. You can use tools like Winetricks to make installation easier. Good if you need an earlier version of IE than Microsoft's official solutions provide.
Change your useragent. In many cases, it used to be that most web browsers would work fine (or at least be operable) on sites optimised for IE only. However, developers couldn't be bothered to support anything outside of IE and would simply put a useragent-based whitelist in place. If you spoof your useragent to be IE, you might still be able to use the site. You can find many extensions for this in Firefox and Chrome/Chromium.
New contributor
All of this was already mentioned in other answers with more details. New answers should add new solutions.
– Alexandre Aubrey
10 hours ago
2
@AlexandreAubrey Maybe I missed one, but I don't see any other answers suggesting spoofing your useragent (which is probably the easiest solution if it works).
– John Montgomery
6 hours ago
As for option 2, Wine comes with a version of Internet Explorer built-in.wine iexplore
in Terminal.
– numbermaniac
3 hours ago
add a comment |
You have a few options:
VM software and an IEDev image. Microsoft provides free (time-limited) versions of Windows with IE in the form of virtual machine images. You can get them here: https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-edge/tools/vms/
Install IE using WINE. The WINE project is a Windows compatibility layer for Unix-like systems including macOS. It's free but installing IE can be a pain. You can use tools like Winetricks to make installation easier. Good if you need an earlier version of IE than Microsoft's official solutions provide.
Change your useragent. In many cases, it used to be that most web browsers would work fine (or at least be operable) on sites optimised for IE only. However, developers couldn't be bothered to support anything outside of IE and would simply put a useragent-based whitelist in place. If you spoof your useragent to be IE, you might still be able to use the site. You can find many extensions for this in Firefox and Chrome/Chromium.
New contributor
All of this was already mentioned in other answers with more details. New answers should add new solutions.
– Alexandre Aubrey
10 hours ago
2
@AlexandreAubrey Maybe I missed one, but I don't see any other answers suggesting spoofing your useragent (which is probably the easiest solution if it works).
– John Montgomery
6 hours ago
As for option 2, Wine comes with a version of Internet Explorer built-in.wine iexplore
in Terminal.
– numbermaniac
3 hours ago
add a comment |
You have a few options:
VM software and an IEDev image. Microsoft provides free (time-limited) versions of Windows with IE in the form of virtual machine images. You can get them here: https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-edge/tools/vms/
Install IE using WINE. The WINE project is a Windows compatibility layer for Unix-like systems including macOS. It's free but installing IE can be a pain. You can use tools like Winetricks to make installation easier. Good if you need an earlier version of IE than Microsoft's official solutions provide.
Change your useragent. In many cases, it used to be that most web browsers would work fine (or at least be operable) on sites optimised for IE only. However, developers couldn't be bothered to support anything outside of IE and would simply put a useragent-based whitelist in place. If you spoof your useragent to be IE, you might still be able to use the site. You can find many extensions for this in Firefox and Chrome/Chromium.
New contributor
You have a few options:
VM software and an IEDev image. Microsoft provides free (time-limited) versions of Windows with IE in the form of virtual machine images. You can get them here: https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-edge/tools/vms/
Install IE using WINE. The WINE project is a Windows compatibility layer for Unix-like systems including macOS. It's free but installing IE can be a pain. You can use tools like Winetricks to make installation easier. Good if you need an earlier version of IE than Microsoft's official solutions provide.
Change your useragent. In many cases, it used to be that most web browsers would work fine (or at least be operable) on sites optimised for IE only. However, developers couldn't be bothered to support anything outside of IE and would simply put a useragent-based whitelist in place. If you spoof your useragent to be IE, you might still be able to use the site. You can find many extensions for this in Firefox and Chrome/Chromium.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 12 hours ago
520520
1511
1511
New contributor
New contributor
All of this was already mentioned in other answers with more details. New answers should add new solutions.
– Alexandre Aubrey
10 hours ago
2
@AlexandreAubrey Maybe I missed one, but I don't see any other answers suggesting spoofing your useragent (which is probably the easiest solution if it works).
– John Montgomery
6 hours ago
As for option 2, Wine comes with a version of Internet Explorer built-in.wine iexplore
in Terminal.
– numbermaniac
3 hours ago
add a comment |
All of this was already mentioned in other answers with more details. New answers should add new solutions.
– Alexandre Aubrey
10 hours ago
2
@AlexandreAubrey Maybe I missed one, but I don't see any other answers suggesting spoofing your useragent (which is probably the easiest solution if it works).
– John Montgomery
6 hours ago
As for option 2, Wine comes with a version of Internet Explorer built-in.wine iexplore
in Terminal.
– numbermaniac
3 hours ago
All of this was already mentioned in other answers with more details. New answers should add new solutions.
– Alexandre Aubrey
10 hours ago
All of this was already mentioned in other answers with more details. New answers should add new solutions.
– Alexandre Aubrey
10 hours ago
2
2
@AlexandreAubrey Maybe I missed one, but I don't see any other answers suggesting spoofing your useragent (which is probably the easiest solution if it works).
– John Montgomery
6 hours ago
@AlexandreAubrey Maybe I missed one, but I don't see any other answers suggesting spoofing your useragent (which is probably the easiest solution if it works).
– John Montgomery
6 hours ago
As for option 2, Wine comes with a version of Internet Explorer built-in.
wine iexplore
in Terminal.– numbermaniac
3 hours ago
As for option 2, Wine comes with a version of Internet Explorer built-in.
wine iexplore
in Terminal.– numbermaniac
3 hours ago
add a comment |
Buy Parallels, buy Windows, install Parallels, install Windows, and now you can run Windows applications inside MacOSX, including Windows internals like Internet Explorer if I'm not mistaken.
Costs a few hundred dollars total, but you now have Windows running inside MacOSX and can run most Windows software directly. Some exceptions exist, especially late versions of DirectX and OpenGL aren't supported because of restrictions imposed by OSX (Apple's stonewalling on providing an up to date OpenGL implementation).
add a comment |
Buy Parallels, buy Windows, install Parallels, install Windows, and now you can run Windows applications inside MacOSX, including Windows internals like Internet Explorer if I'm not mistaken.
Costs a few hundred dollars total, but you now have Windows running inside MacOSX and can run most Windows software directly. Some exceptions exist, especially late versions of DirectX and OpenGL aren't supported because of restrictions imposed by OSX (Apple's stonewalling on providing an up to date OpenGL implementation).
add a comment |
Buy Parallels, buy Windows, install Parallels, install Windows, and now you can run Windows applications inside MacOSX, including Windows internals like Internet Explorer if I'm not mistaken.
Costs a few hundred dollars total, but you now have Windows running inside MacOSX and can run most Windows software directly. Some exceptions exist, especially late versions of DirectX and OpenGL aren't supported because of restrictions imposed by OSX (Apple's stonewalling on providing an up to date OpenGL implementation).
Buy Parallels, buy Windows, install Parallels, install Windows, and now you can run Windows applications inside MacOSX, including Windows internals like Internet Explorer if I'm not mistaken.
Costs a few hundred dollars total, but you now have Windows running inside MacOSX and can run most Windows software directly. Some exceptions exist, especially late versions of DirectX and OpenGL aren't supported because of restrictions imposed by OSX (Apple's stonewalling on providing an up to date OpenGL implementation).
answered 16 hours ago
jwentingjwenting
1672
1672
add a comment |
add a comment |
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– bmike♦
3 hours ago