Hello, First off, I should let you know that I'm new to Wine... On a fresh copy of RedHat 9, I installed the most recent version of Wine (from source) and it seems to be working fine. However, one of the biggest reasons I put Wine on this machine was so I can run a copy of Internet Explorer under Linux. However, I haven't been able to locate a full network install of IE6, and their setup program complains about needing a Window OS... (the nerve!!). Does anyone have any suggestions? Has anyone been able to run IE under Wine? If so, how? I'd prefer IE6, since that's the latest, but 5.5 would be ok too. By the way, before anyone starts... I know about the various Open Source browsers and all that, I prefer Mozilla. But, I have to be able to test web application under IE, and I'd REALLY prefer not to bother with a MS system if I can help it. Regardless of whether we like MS products or not, they have 90% of the desktop market and browser market, so if you are professionally building a web applications or sites or any other thing that uses a web browser and is going to be publicly accessible, you're fooling yourself (and being a rather poor software designer) if you let your *nix pride keep you from testing on IE. (The preceding paragraph is in response the some of the worthless responses I saw in the archives regarding any question about using IE under Wine... I didn't find any actual answers, just replies about changing User-Agents and snipes about IE users... It's not a question of user agent, it a question of stuff not working in IE. If it doesn't work in IE and you want the world to see it... Then that mean your world is less than 10% of the internet-going population of the world...) Flame me if you want (you'll hear my eyes rolling from across the world, I guarantee), but someone at least answer my questions first. If IE can't run under Wine... I guess I'll have to use VMWare and install Windows... *shudders* Thanks -mike
Mike, I can't respond directly to running IE under generic Wine but I run it (IE 6) under Crossover Office version 1.3.1 on Xandros Linux and it works (I started to say just great, but thats not true - Mozilla works great!) fine. It may also work well under Wine but I have not tried it personally. WTR getting a full install of IE, the way that I did it was to install Quicken Basic 2000 under Crossover Office which forces the installation of IE 5.0 (THE NERVE!!). I then did an upgrade from 5.0 to 6.0. I am sure that there are other Window$ programs out there that also force the installation if IE from which you could do what I did. I have done this same installation 1st on my test machine, then on my Athlon XP 2100+ machine after I DUMPED Window$ and on my Compaq Presario 1825 old laptop and all went flawlessly. I hope this helps, Ed Richards Baton Rouge, Louisiana -----Original Message----- From: Webmaster@care.org [mailto:Webmaster@care.org] Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2003 1:00 PM To: wine-users@winehq.com Subject: Running Internet Explorer under Wine Hello, First off, I should let you know that I'm new to Wine... On a fresh copy of RedHat 9, I installed the most recent version of Wine (from source) and it seems to be working fine. However, one of the biggest reasons I put Wine on this machine was so I can run a copy of Internet Explorer under Linux. However, I haven't been able to locate a full network install of IE6, and their setup program complains about needing a Window OS... (the nerve!!). Does anyone have any suggestions? Has anyone been able to run IE under Wine? If so, how? I'd prefer IE6, since that's the latest, but 5.5 would be ok too. By the way, before anyone starts... I know about the various Open Source browsers and all that, I prefer Mozilla. But, I have to be able to test web application under IE, and I'd REALLY prefer not to bother with a MS system if I can help it. Regardless of whether we like MS products or not, they have 90% of the desktop market and browser market, so if you are professionally building a web applications or sites or any other thing that uses a web browser and is going to be publicly accessible, you're fooling yourself (and being a rather poor software designer) if you let your *nix pride keep you from testing on IE. (The preceding paragraph is in response the some of the worthless responses I saw in the archives regarding any question about using IE under Wine... I didn't find any actual answers, just replies about changing User-Agents and snipes about IE users... It's not a question of user agent, it a question of stuff not working in IE. If it doesn't work in IE and you want the world to see it... Then that mean your world is less than 10% of the internet-going population of the world...) Flame me if you want (you'll hear my eyes rolling from across the world, I guarantee), but someone at least answer my questions first. If IE can't run under Wine... I guess I'll have to use VMWare and install Windows... *shudders* Thanks -mike _______________________________________________ wine-users mailing list wine-users@winehq.com http://www.winehq.com/mailman/listinfo/wine-users This email, including any attached files, may contain confidential and privileged information. Any review, use, distribution or disclosure of included information by unintended recipients is strictly prohibited. If you are not a named recipient or authorized to receive and / or act on information sent to a named recipient, or have reason to believe you are not or should not be one of the named recipients, please notify sender accordingly by reply email and delete all copies of this message prior to forwarding, copying or otherwise reproducing this message or attachments thereto. For information regarding the export control status of items discussed in this document, please refer to the project control list. Thank you.
On Wednesday 15 October 2003 02:00 pm, Webmaster@care.org wrote:> First off, I should let you know that I'm new to Wine... On a fresh > copy of RedHat 9, I installed the most recent version of Wine (from > source) and it seems to be working fine. However, one of the biggest > reasons I put Wine on this machine was so I can run a copy of > Internet Explorer under Linux. However, I haven't been able to locate > a full network install of IE6, and their setup program complains > about needing a Window OS... (the nerve!!). > > Does anyone have any suggestions? Has anyone been able to run IE > under Wine? If so, how? I'd prefer IE6, since that's the latest, > but 5.5 would be ok too.Like someone else, I found that another application automatically installed IE5 when it installed. I have no problems running IE5.5 using Wine on a Mandrake Linux 9.1 installation. However, I don't use it for actually surfing. I only look at web pages that I create on it.> By the way, before anyone starts... I know about the various Open > Source browsers and all that, I prefer Mozilla. But, I have to be > able to test web application under IE, and I'd REALLY prefer not to > bother with a MS system if I can help it. Regardless of whether we > like MS products or not, they have 90% of the desktop market and > browser market,While 90% of the computers sold for the desktop market have MS-Windows already installed on them, have you checked the traffic on the web sites that you're concerned with? I think you might find that the number of people actually using IE may be less than that figure -- unless you're restricting the site to only IE visitors. I have a number of sites, none of which restrict browser usage, and only one of them focuses on Linux issues. The others have nothing to do with computers or Linux. On my busiest site which gets thousands of hits per day, the percentage of IE visitors never exceeds 81% and is frequently lower than that figure. On the site that focuses on Linux issues, IE visitors never exceed 55% per day and are frequently lower than that figure. In addition, Opera will mask itself as IE. I've been noticing a steady increase of Opera users not masking themselves as IE on all my sites, which suggests that the number of Opera users masking themselves in order to get on sites that only talk to IE is also increasing. That means that the number of IE visitors is probably less than the traffic data indicates.> so if you are professionally building a web > applications or sites or any other thing that uses a web browser and > is going to be publicly accessible, you're fooling yourself (and > being a rather poor software designer) if you let your *nix pride > keep you from testing on IE.The latest browsers are all using HTML 4.0 and that includes IE6. So if you are excluding other browsers, you are using features that are only included with MS-Windows like ActiveX. Since IE has started trying to conform better to the general standards, I've not noticed much of a difference between how most things look on IE versus other browsers. There is a big difference, however, if you're using IE5 because it has a lot of idiosyncrasies that never conformed to general HTML standards.> (The preceding paragraph is in response the some of the worthless > responses I saw in the archives regarding any question about using IE > under Wine... I didn't find any actual answers, just replies about > changing User-Agents and snipes about IE users... It's not a > question of user agent, it a question of stuff not working in IE. If > it doesn't work in IE and you want the world to see it... Then that > mean your world is less than 10% of the internet-going population of > the world...)If you're doing something that is not working in IE, is it working in any of the browsers? Most of the other browsers don't do anything that is unique, unlike IE with ActiveX. Usually if it's working in Mozilla, it's also working in IE. It's MS that produces the restrictive software by using functions that only ship with their browser. The other browsers use functions and plugins that are universally available, even to IE users.> If IE can't run under Wine... I guess I'll have to use VMWare and > install Windows... *shudders*Depending on what exactly you are trying to get it to do, you may have to go that route anyway. Wine has not yet implemented all the dlls that come with MS-Windows. CodeWeavers' Crossover Office Suite has the best record for running MS-produced software. deedee Registered Linux User #327485 Visit "WordStar & GNU/Linux" http://www.wordstar2.com Also, see the WordStar Users Group http://www.wordstar2.com/cbabbage/wordstar
So far, I haven't managed to get it to run, but I have managed to get IE to install... Still working on that though. Thanks for the help! To respond in (not-so) short, I work for a major international non-profit. Our website logs more than 150,000 total visits (User Sessions,not hits... Hits are in the millions... Unique sessions is on the order of 80,000). The average browsers accessing this site, and the other sites we have, though they are much smaller in traffic volume, are 85-89% Internet Explorer and the rest is pretty much Mozilla, either Netscape 6 or Mozilla. Other, non-bot, browsers make up less than 1% of our traffic. That's still a very large number of people using non-IE systems, (1% 0f 150K is still 1500). I'm not saying one should ignore and never not use Mozilla or Windows or IE... I mean.. hello? This is a Wine mailing list, I'm Linux user, I'm certainly not in the MCSE camp. The bottom line is, I'm not developing sites for the technologically savvy at this job, so whatever is the default on the vast majority of our user's systems is what gets used. It's no surprise that if you run a site that focuses on Open Source stuff, that site will ALWAYS have a disproportionately low number of IE and Windows users relative to the norm, this is hardly uncommon knowledge. The only restriction we have is based on DOM, not browser. Using Gary Keith's Browscap.ini (http://www.garykeith.com/browsers/browscap.asp) file, one can accurately filter the content being served based on user-agent. This means I can detect to the highest degree possible, what each user's browser and OS is (and much more, but that's all that matters really). The goal is to then have different CSS, JS and HTML based on what that browser can actually do, and not send them anything else. If someone come in on Lynx (hey, could happen!!), then they see a text only version, if someone come in with IE 3, they also get the text only version (heh, kidding!). I haven't gotten there yet... I don't have a budget or any help around here right now, so it's all I can do to keep the hamsters running in the server box. See, I'm the sole DBA, Web Apps developer, CMS admin, html developer and graphics designer for a site with a couple thousand pages and a user base of 80K users and an organization of around 12,000 folks worldwide... It's keeps me busy. At least it's a non-profit, so every line of code I write to enhance our online presence and draw means more donation money to help do things like demineing Angola or providing HIV-AIDS assistance in Nigeria, or building clean water supply systems in Peru or Afghanistan. Makes it worth it at the end of the day. -mike -----Original Message----- From: deedee [mailto:deedee@writestop.com] Sent: Thursday, October 16, 2003 3:02 PM To: wine-users@winehq.com Cc: Webmaster@care.org Subject: Re: Running Internet Explorer under Wine On Wednesday 15 October 2003 02:00 pm, Webmaster@care.org wrote:> First off, I should let you know that I'm new to Wine... On a fresh > copy of RedHat 9, I installed the most recent version of Wine (from > source) and it seems to be working fine. However, one of the biggest > reasons I put Wine on this machine was so I can run a copy of > Internet Explorer under Linux. However, I haven't been able to locate > a full network install of IE6, and their setup program complains > about needing a Window OS... (the nerve!!). > > Does anyone have any suggestions? Has anyone been able to run IE > under Wine? If so, how? I'd prefer IE6, since that's the latest, > but 5.5 would be ok too.Like someone else, I found that another application automatically installed IE5 when it installed. I have no problems running IE5.5 using Wine on a Mandrake Linux 9.1 installation. However, I don't use it for actually surfing. I only look at web pages that I create on it.> By the way, before anyone starts... I know about the various Open > Source browsers and all that, I prefer Mozilla. But, I have to be > able to test web application under IE, and I'd REALLY prefer not to > bother with a MS system if I can help it. Regardless of whether we > like MS products or not, they have 90% of the desktop market and > browser market,While 90% of the computers sold for the desktop market have MS-Windows already installed on them, have you checked the traffic on the web sites that you're concerned with? I think you might find that the number of people actually using IE may be less than that figure -- unless you're restricting the site to only IE visitors. I have a number of sites, none of which restrict browser usage, and only one of them focuses on Linux issues. The others have nothing to do with computers or Linux. On my busiest site which gets thousands of hits per day, the percentage of IE visitors never exceeds 81% and is frequently lower than that figure. On the site that focuses on Linux issues, IE visitors never exceed 55% per day and are frequently lower than that figure. In addition, Opera will mask itself as IE. I've been noticing a steady increase of Opera users not masking themselves as IE on all my sites, which suggests that the number of Opera users masking themselves in order to get on sites that only talk to IE is also increasing. That means that the number of IE visitors is probably less than the traffic data indicates.> so if you are professionally building a web > applications or sites or any other thing that uses a web browser and > is going to be publicly accessible, you're fooling yourself (and > being a rather poor software designer) if you let your *nix pride > keep you from testing on IE.The latest browsers are all using HTML 4.0 and that includes IE6. So if you are excluding other browsers, you are using features that are only included with MS-Windows like ActiveX. Since IE has started trying to conform better to the general standards, I've not noticed much of a difference between how most things look on IE versus other browsers. There is a big difference, however, if you're using IE5 because it has a lot of idiosyncrasies that never conformed to general HTML standards.> (The preceding paragraph is in response the some of the worthless > responses I saw in the archives regarding any question about using IE > under Wine... I didn't find any actual answers, just replies about > changing User-Agents and snipes about IE users... It's not a > question of user agent, it a question of stuff not working in IE. If > it doesn't work in IE and you want the world to see it... Then that > mean your world is less than 10% of the internet-going population of > the world...)If you're doing something that is not working in IE, is it working in any of the browsers? Most of the other browsers don't do anything that is unique, unlike IE with ActiveX. Usually if it's working in Mozilla, it's also working in IE. It's MS that produces the restrictive software by using functions that only ship with their browser. The other browsers use functions and plugins that are universally available, even to IE users.> If IE can't run under Wine... I guess I'll have to use VMWare and > install Windows... *shudders*Depending on what exactly you are trying to get it to do, you may have to go that route anyway. Wine has not yet implemented all the dlls that come with MS-Windows. CodeWeavers' Crossover Office Suite has the best record for running MS-produced software. deedee Registered Linux User #327485 Visit "WordStar & GNU/Linux" http://www.wordstar2.com Also, see the WordStar Users Group http://www.wordstar2.com/cbabbage/wordstar