Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"As someone who doesn't reside in the USA, I was wondering what would be the best way to get internet for my computer in the US for a couple of weeks? If it were Europe I know I'd look for some prepaid data. Is there anything similar offered by American carriers? A MiFi or a data SIM that I can tether from would work, but I'm trying to maintain a tight budget. Help!"
This really doesn't make sense. They have to stick something with it, it's not like you can walk into a store and buy a CD with Chrome or Firefox on it. Though at the very least it would be nice if you could completely remove IE from windows.
Why not, during Windows setup, just ask the user which browser they want? The OS could then go out, grab the installer, and install it as the default browser? This is just like IE's setup where it asks you which search engine you want as default.
If you completely removed IE, you'd lose windows explorer. That would be kind of bad.
@frogboy: That's the problem. There's no reason that a file manager should require an internet browser to work.
@Frogboy
Microsoft merge the two to prevent people from telling what to do, this caused nothing but vulnerabilities for better half of decade.
true say
"Why not, during Windows setup, just ask the user which browser they want?"
Why should Microsoft be supporting other people's products?
Incorrect. IE hasn't been apart of explorer for almost 6 years now.