Click to expand.I hardly QA at all. My website is all auto-generated XHTML from Markdown source.
![Run internet explorer on mac Run internet explorer on mac](http://cdn.osxdaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/internet-explorer-vm-mac.jpg)
The Markdown.pl script produces valid XHTML and if any browser can't display it then it is the browser's problem not mine I do of course view my own website so I know it is OK. This is mainly using Safari, but also Lynx and occasionally IE (but only on Windows). If a webmaster had already taken the decision to create a non-standards based site and use feature available only in IE then I can see how they might want to QA for IE on Mac even though that would only cover a very small segment of the Mac audience. But basically Mac OS X needs IE like a fish needs a bicycle. Yes, a link would be nice. I don't know of any recent stats but almost exactly a year ago John Gruber posted some stats for people accessing his Daring Fireball site. The relevent bit is: Browser Unique IPs Safari 9,883 IE Mac 1,165 IE Win 9,353 For the full article see: I hardly QA at all.
Run Internet Explorer on Mac without Windows. If you want to run Internet Explorer on Mac without installing Windows on it, some cloud browsing solutions allow you to access websites in IE from within any web browser. These solutions basically provide access to Internet Explorer, running on their Windows based servers, through a proxy.
![Explorer Explorer](http://cdn.osxdaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/use-internet-explorer-11-mac-os-x-1.jpg)
My website is all auto-generated XHTML from Markdown source. The Markdown.pl script produces valid XHTML and if any browser can't display it then it is the browser's problem not mine I do of course view my own website so I know it is OK.
This is mainly using Safari, but also Lynx and occasionally IE (but only on Windows). If a webmaster had already taken the decision to create a non-standards based site and use feature available only in IE then I can see how they might want to QA for IE on Mac even though that would only cover a very small segment of the Mac audience. But basically Mac OS X needs IE like a fish needs a bicycle. Click to expand.IE on the Mac and IE on winders are two separate and distinct pieces of software, and, other than the name, have nothing in common with each other (or so said M$ at it's anti-trust trial). The rendering engines are different as far as I can tell. Other than that, the only reason that I keep IE on my Mac is for the 'Print Preview' dialogue.
It has features not even the winders version has and which I wish other browsers would incorporate, e.g. 'shrink pages to fit' and 'crop wide pages.' A minor benefit, but it can save a lot of paper.
Click to expand.Well then you're a moron because as another poster pointed out, IE on Windows is nothing like IE on the Mac. He was talking about IE on the Mac. Inserting IE Windows into the conversation was a complete non-sequitur and added nothing to the conversation. As it stands, IE Windows is more than 70 percent of the browser market, which you'd know if you knew how to do a fucking Google search. So stop typing, because every time you do, you make a bigger ass of yourself. Jesus fucking christ, read for content, eh?
You have the option to install all available versions of Internet Explorer at once, or install only specific versions. To install specific versions, you'll need to run each command separately. Copy and paste the command(s) below into Terminal and press Enter. Don't include the commented (#hash) portion. You'll be prompted for your OS X password.