Korean engineer builds Internet Explorer tombstone to honor now-dead browser

Korean engineer builds Internet Explorer tombstone to honor now-dead browser

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After confirming that they were killing Internet Explorer last year, Microsoft finally did the deed on June 15 earlier this month. To honor and honor the OG browser that once dominated the market, a South Korean software engineer decided to make a tombstone for the Internet Explorer browser, which recently went viral on the Internet. Check out the details now!

Korean engineer builds Internet Explorer tombstone to honor now-dead browser

Jung Ki-young is a Korea-based software engineer who had a love-hate relationship with the browser. So after the recent death of Internet Explorer, Ki-young spent a month designing an elegant tombstone for the browser.

After designing the stone with the original "e" logo and the phrase: "He was a good tool to download other browsers", the engineer spent 430,000 won (~Rs 25,950) to build it. The memorial was displayed at his brother's cafe in Gyeongju, Korea.

The Korean engineer went on to state that he had to work much harder to make his apps and websites look good in Internet Explorer. And since most Korean government organizations and banks still use Internet Explorer for daily Internet browsing, Ki-young's clients asked him to keep their websites and apps optimized for Explorer.

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Korean engineer builds Internet Explorer tombstone to honor now-dead browser.
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