At least there’s a route to use Microsoft’s browser and other software they bundle to get another browser on the system.
I remember on the classic Mac, Apple didn’t bundle a decompression program for quite some time. Files on the Mac didn’t just consist of a single lump of data, but could also have a resource fork, which had structured data. Executables were a format that had to have data in that resource fork. Which meant that you had a boostrapping problem – you had no executable on the computer that could download and reconstruct a usable executable, so you first needed to obtain – on some form of removable media – software, like Stuffit Expander or similar – capable of constructing an executable from downloaded data.
At least there’s a route to use Microsoft’s browser and other software they bundle to get another browser on the system.
I remember on the classic Mac, Apple didn’t bundle a decompression program for quite some time. Files on the Mac didn’t just consist of a single lump of data, but could also have a resource fork, which had structured data. Executables were a format that had to have data in that resource fork. Which meant that you had a boostrapping problem – you had no executable on the computer that could download and reconstruct a usable executable, so you first needed to obtain – on some form of removable media – software, like Stuffit Expander or similar – capable of constructing an executable from downloaded data.