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    <title>The Browser We Loved to Hate (and Now Just Kind of Miss)</title>
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    <description>Internet Explorer is dead. It has been for a while now. So why do so many developers find themselves weirdly, inexplicably sentimental about the browser that consumed years of their professional lives? This is an opinion piece about grief, identity, and the strange comfort of a predictable enemy.</description>
    <author>Internet Explorer Tan</author>
    <category>Opinion</category>
    <pubDate>Sat, 11 Jul 2026 10:40:36 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Thirty Bugs of Glory: The Internet Explorer CSS Disasters That Made Us All Better Developers</title>
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    <description>Before Stack Overflow existed, developers were already screaming into the void about IE&#039;s box model. We&#039;re taking a loving, slightly traumatized walk down memory lane through the rendering quirks that defined a generation of web development — and somehow, incredibly, made us stronger.</description>
    <author>Internet Explorer Tan</author>
    <category>Nostalgia</category>
    <pubDate>Sat, 11 Jul 2026 10:40:36 GMT</pubDate>
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    <title>Welcome to the IE Hall of Fame: A Tour Through the Browser&#039;s Most Unforgettable Moments</title>
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    <description>Imagine a museum dedicated entirely to Internet Explorer&#039;s most iconic — and occasionally catastrophic — design choices, UI quirks, and error messages. We built one. In article form. Come for the spinning &#039;e&#039;, stay for the crash dialogs that defined an era of digital anxiety.</description>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 11 Jul 2026 10:40:36 GMT</pubDate>
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