Activating the “flip ahead” feature in Internet Explorer 10 on Windows 8 and Windows RT

As I have mentioned previously, Internet Explorer 10 has been built from the ground up to offer great support for touch while still retaining all of its advantages for keyboard and mouse.

One simple but very effective feature is how you can simply "swipe" from left to right to go to the previous web page - essentially the equivalent of pressing the BACK button. This is a perfectly natural gesture when you're using touch and once you start using it you're likely never to press the BACK button again. Actually you can use a similar gesture to move forward - swipe from right to left as an equivalent of pressing the FORWARD button on the browser.

However it gets even cleverer than that. If you visit a site that returns many pages of information - a search engine like Bing is an obvious example but there are plenty more - you will normally have to carefully try to hit the "next page" link on the web page to move to page 2, page 3, and so on. And given that so few web pages are optimised for touch this can be a tricky business at times.

Well Internet Explorer 10 has a great feature called "flip ahead" that can really help. Instead of aiming for the "next page" button with your finger you can just swipe from right to left and the browser is clever enough to realise that you want to move to the next page of results. It's another totally natural gesture and can really make navigating much easier.

To use it, make sure you have the option enabled. Open Internet Explorer and bring up the charms (swipe from right screen edge) then choose "settings". Then "Internet Options" and move down to the "Flip Ahead" option and select it.

 

Flipahead

Give it a try on Bing and see what you think. While it works on many sites that return multiple pages of information it doesn't work on all of them. Some of the sites I use regularly where it works are ebay, trip advisor, and even the BBC website where it moves you to the next news item. I tried the Superdry website for clothes shopping and it worked there too. I’m sure you’ll find others.

It's likely that the feature will get "smarter" and work with an increasing number of sites, however in the interim it remains a really cool feature - give it a spin and see what you think.