Internet Explorer 9 - Supports embedded ICC

You will get a better answer in the computer section, maybe
 
In that case..... Mods can this be moved to computer section. Thanks
 
Only a few years after Safari and Firefox, better late than never ;)
 
Does anyone with a choice actually use IE?

I mean I am on it now because I am at work but it's the last browser I would use at home.....FF, Chrome, Safari, Opera, Camino and many others long before IE would be my preference. As already said IE simply copies the most popular functions from other browsers when upgrading making it months if not years behind the times and it still is the most buggy browser to use.
 
Here we go again, if it's not I hate IE it's I hate Jessops.

Yet another thread containing posts with naff all to do with the opening post!
 
Please can someone actually answer the original question???
 
I don't know, sorry
 
If it supports profiles it will help on photographers computers as hopefully they will have profiled their monitors - but as for Joe Public - as their monitors are far too bright and cold your images will look too light and cold....

and as for space - how many people have monitors that show the ADOBE98 space - have you spent £2k + on your monitor???

sRGB is the way to go for any screen image
 
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If it supports profiles it will help on photographers computers as hopefully they will have profiled their monitors - but as for Joe Public - as their monitors are far too bright and cold your images will look too light and cold....

and as for space - how many people have monitors that show the ADOBE98 space - have you spent £2k + on your monitor???

sRGB is the way to go for any screen image

Not £2k, but quite a large number of the Dell monitors support greater than sRGB supposedly.


@ OP
For photographers, yes it should help, if we upload or browse our photos through iE
It should at least mean that the photos are consistently wrong when viewed by another computer.
When you print a photo, do you use relative colorimetric, or perceptual colorimetric?
Our brains fill in the details which are missing often in images that we see. The colour profiling should at least mean that when a section of an image is approaching blue, we see blue rather than green.
 
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