IE most influential tech product in last 25 years?

Despite the ubiquity of the iPod, Microsoft's Internet Explorer is the 'most influential' tech product of the past 25 years, according to a survey of IT professionals.

The survey was carried out by the Computing Technology Industry Association (CompTIA), a 25-year-old trade body which certifies IT professionals and is funded by major vendors, including Microsoft. Out of the top five products in the poll, only one -- the iPod -- is not a Microsoft product.

Internet Explorer, which garnered two-thirds of the vote, was launched in 1995. Originally based on the little-known Spyglass Mosaic browser, its main competitor at the time was Netscape. By the time Internet Explorer version 5 was released in 1999, it had become the world's most popular browser.

It still holds that position today, although it is facing steadily increasing competition from the open-source browser Firefox, seen by many as a more stable and secure product.

Second place in the poll went to Microsoft Word, selected by 56 percent of respondents. Windows 95 was third (50 percent), followed by Microsoft Excel and Apple's iPod in joint fourth place (49 percent). Respondents were able to vote for multiple technologies.

Microsoft and CompTIA have traditionally been closely aligned, particularly in the fight against open-source software -- both are key members of the Initiative for Software Choice, which frequently takes an anti-open-source stance

Earlier this year, CompTIA threw its weight behind Microsoft in Redmond's fight against an EU report which allegedly favoured open-source software. On another occasion, when the European Commission fined Microsoft last year for not sharing or licensing protocol information with its rivals, CompTIA called the US$357m fine "arbitrary and capricious".

CompTIA's survey was completed by 471 IT professionals and was carried out in May and June of this year. Other products which made the top 10 include (in order from sixth to tenth): the BlackBerry, Photoshop, McAfee VirusScan, Netscape Navigator and the PalmPilot.

David Meyer reported for ZDNet UK from London

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Talkback 12 comments

    Well isn't their bias obvious Anonymous -- 01/08/07

    What an utterly ridiculous list. IE the most "influential product"? Insane.

    A product so transparently copied from other vendors, placed into prominence by the blatant and illegal abuse of an existing monopoly and then inflicted on the industry for years with all its inherent security faults and poor design, and this is the "most influential product"?

    At least this group doesn't bother hiding its bias. Funded by Microsoft and already supportive of Microsoft in other areas. I guess they know who pays their wages anyway ...

    Agreed. Anonymous -- 01/08/07 (in reply to #320083696)

    This is ludicrous.

    Word and Excel ?????? (blatant copies of Lotus and others) McAfee AV ????? Blackberry ??????

    Are these people deluded ???

    No, they're not...they're just people of limited ability with worthless out-of-a-ceral-packet 'certs" and a cheque from Microsoft.

    For gods sake, if you're going to cover these things then at least get Torvalds or Tannenbeum (sic) or someone.

    Wrong, the range is 25 years. Anonymous -- 01/08/07 (in reply to #320083722)

    When word first appeared all that was available was products like word imperfect and others. Word was a quantum leap over these.

    You also state that excel is a copy of lotus, well lotus is a copy of visicalc. Lotus was just a copy whereas excel again was a large leap forward.

    There may have been better products around, but they were not out in public use!

    pfffft...big deal.... Anonymous -- 01/08/07 (in reply to #320083744)

    It's still just office automation.

    Your claim is like saying that a better street directory was a major influence in the automotive industry.
    I'm talking ABS, monocoque design, EFI, seat belts that sort of thing....REAL innovation and progress....not window dressing.

    I challenge anyone to name ONE true innovation...just one...that Microsoft has ever developed.
    Go on..just one.......one......... ???????????
    *waiting*

    pfffft...big deal.... Anonymous -- 27/08/07 (in reply to #320083745)

    ODBC - Took a hundred different SQL interfacing API's and protocols from a multitude of vendors and forced them into one. Most current SQL access mechanisms are layer cakes on this in reality. JDBC is essentially a clone of it (for once in reverse :)).

    Profit over Performance Anonymous -- 01/08/07

    Microsoft's stance against Open Source software is disgusting. It just shows they're in it to make a buck and not to provide people with a decent product (like this is news for any business).

    Profit over Performance Anonymous -- 27/08/07 (in reply to #320083723)

    There all in it for a buck. Even most of the "open source" products now. They have an upgunned, more featured version that costs, or a supported version that costs. Check out MySql if you doubt.

    WHAT!?!? Anonymous -- 02/08/07

    What an absolute joke! Considering Microsoft gave Netscape a 4 year run before they made the decision, which the DOJ later decided was illegal, of forcing Windows users to use IE you'd have to more rightly say Netscape was more "influential". At least on Microsoft!

    And 10 million lines of code with 4000 functions, 98% of which aren't utilised by users is the second most influential. LOL!

    Where sis they do this survey...Redmond??

    What a joke cyber sammy -- 04/08/07

    .. and my vote is for Apache http server, or, Tim Berners-Lee .. what do you mean he isn't a tech product.

    Professionals? Andy Goss -- 09/08/07

    Years ago, when I was holding the fort for an IT manager who was rarely in his office, I contributed to many such surveys. Even as a mere analyst programmer, I was a professional, but how many of the respondents to this survey are actually jumped-up accountants and paper-shufflers, glowing with satisfaction at being addressed as "IT Professionals"?
    The list suggests that these are merely office workers, parroting the names they see around them.
    Also, the terms of reference appear to exclude non-brandname generics such the Internet, relational databases, object oriented langauges, and XML, all of which should be ranked higher by any IT pro than consumer goodies such as the Ipod and Blackberry.

    A little remembered thing.... Anonymous -- 27/08/07

    Id say three different things.

    1) The mouse. It predates 25 years but wasnt really used till the first mac which was about 1983 if my memory fails me

    2) The right click. Actually evented i believe by borland but revolutionised gui interaction

    3) Trumpet Winsock. Until this little piece of software no one used the web or internet from home pc's. It ruleed in that gap until TCP access was inbuilt into OS's around 1996(?). It changed everything and started the internet craze.

    Biased Survey Troy White -- 27/08/07

    Why is this obviously biased survey even being made news?

    A group who are openly funded by Microsoft picks a majority of Microsoft's products.

    What else could the outcome have been.

    Pathetic.

    PS: Another vote for Apache HTTPD from me. Still the number one tech app in my mind. IE wouldn't have even had a guernsey if not for Apache.

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