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Lets say you are running Windows and there is only one browser installed. What if one day this browser dies, would it be still possible to connect to the Internet somehow (to search for the solution or at least download some file or patch)?
In other words, can you work with Internet without a browser in Windows? At least some basic operations - view page in text format or even html sources, download file through http.
Maybe this is a stupid idea, but couldn't you just use a portable version of Lynx? :/ – SarahofGaia – 2015-07-30T16:35:06.283
20[Joke] If the only browser in Windows is dead, how to ask a question on SuperUser? – Hemant – 2009-10-03T17:19:02.210
By default, not so easy. But if you are a Windows Developer, you will have Visual Studio or MSDN Help. Then you can browse internet via them or Winamp, or download accelerator Plus etc. – Ganesh R. – 2009-10-03T19:15:55.843
I'm still scratching my head as to what exactly "browser is dead" means. – quack quixote – 2009-10-03T20:17:05.377
1Browser is dead means it throws an error during launch and won't start (or freezes, or goes into BSOD). It could happen after a system update or for any other reasons. Just like any other software. – serg – 2009-10-04T04:17:16.230
I think Winamp uses the IE engine. Maybe Songbird, though, since it uses some Mozilla guts and has a web browser. – Nathaniel – 2009-10-05T19:43:47.370
You can download/view HTML files from the internet using Microsoft Word, or Adobe CSS. – Samy Bencherif – 2013-09-20T20:32:32.970