Use IE11 in Mac OS X using ModernIE from Microsoft

Use IE11 in Mac OS X using ModernIE from Microsoft

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Internet Explorer 11 is a Windows web browser from Microsoft, but those running OS X on a Mac can also use Internet Explorer 11 through a great free service called ModernIE from Microsoft. Being able to run Internet Explorer 11 directly on the Mac without having to access a Windows machine or boot a VM is incredibly useful for webdevelopers and web designers in particular, but some Mac users may find it necessary to use IE 11 in order to access a particular web service or website as well.

Whatever the reason, if you want to use Internet Explorer on a Mac, we’ll show you how to do it in the easiest possible way. Yes, it’s a complete version of IE11, it’s always the latest version, and it works great.

This tip uses a free internet service from Microsoft called Modern IE, which relies on Remote Desktop to access Internet Explorer 11 from Windows but atop OS X. It’s fast, but obviously requires internet service given the reliance on remoting. If you need anoffline solution, you should run IE in a virtual machine instead, which is another free approach, albeit a bit more technical.

Requirements

Once you’ve met those basic requirements, the rest is really easy to setup.

How to Use IE11 in Mac OS X with IE Tech Preview

This will work to run IE 11 on any version of OS X that Remote Desktop is compatible with, we’re demonstrating here with OS X El Capitan but it will work with Mavericks, Yosemite, Snow Leopard, etc too.

    1. Go to Modern.IE and subscribe to the service with your Microsoft account (this is free), and pick a region nearest you for the best performance – after you subscribe your Microsoft account will get an email saying “You can start using Remote IE right now!”

    2. Now launch the Microsoft Remote Desktop app you downloaded a moment ago

    1. Click on “Azure RemoteApp” in the Remote Desktop titlebar

    1. Now log in to authenticate with your Microsoft account, accepting the invitation to use Internet Explorer

    1. Under ‘Internet Explorer’, double-click on “IE Tech Preview” (or select it and click the Start button)

    1. Wait a moment or two while Internet Explorer 11 loads, in a moment a new IE 11 browser window, complete with the familiar Windows UI, will appear on the Mac desktop

    1. That’s it, you’re ready to use Internet Explorer 11 just as you would if you were running Windows natively. Yes really, this is a complete Internet Explorer web browser on your Mac. You can browse the web as usual, everything is loaded in a true Internet Explorer browse

      1. The Internet Explorer 11 web browser version will update itself with updates, you do not need to do anything to update IE versions or change software. Each time you connect to the IE Tech Preview, the new version will load automatically.

      2. Complete Access to Internet Explorer Developer Tools on the Mac

      3. For developers and designers, running Internet Explorer 11 this way also offers complete access to the IE Developer Tools which should make it much easier to troubleshoot IE specific issues with syntax, HTML, css, Javascript, or whatever else you’re working on.

      4. You can even launch the Web Inspector Tools in IE into a separate window, which is great for larger displays or multi-screen setups.

      5. On subsequent launches and anytime you want to run Internet Explorer again, you just need to open the Remote Desktop app, go to the Azure section and launch the Internet Explorer Remote IE config again.

      6. You may need to periodically renew a certificate by authenticating with the Microsoft login, but that’s about it.

      7. For those whom were wondering how this works, it’s very similar to using VNC orScreen Sharing from Mac to Mac in OS X, you’re accessing a remote session (hosted by Microsoft in this case) except rather than accessing an entire computer, it’s just giving you the Internet Explorer web browser.

      8. It’s fast, fluid, and pretty impressive, assuming you have reasonable broadband internet at least. So while it works great if the Mac has a reliable internet connection, it won’t work for offline situations because it’s not truly installing Internet Explorer on the Mac, and it’s not downloading Internet Explorer to the Mac either. If you need a solution that works both online and offline, then running IE in VirtualBox using a free VM is still a great solution, as it downloads IE specifically into a VM on the Mac, but for most casual users or testing purposes, it’s probably unnecessary to have a complete virtual machine when you can use this remote approach instead.

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