I'm in the process of transitioning my work to a new PC, and so I'm in the awkward situation where I'm doing some things on the old computer and other things on the new computer -- sometimes the same thing on both of them. This is one such case.
The new PC is running Windows 7 and Internet Explorer 9. When I opened the Ars Technica page, I right-clicked on a certain story, but the context menu didn't give me an option to open that link in a new tab or window -- just some irrelevant options to go "back," "forward" "select all," etc. This was surprising because over on my Vista PC running IE8, the same right-clicking action gives me the expected context menu to "open link" in a new tab or in a new window, to "save target as," etc.
To be precise, on the Ars Technica page, with IE8 on Vista if I right-click on the headline, I get that useless context menu, but clicking on the picture associated with the story I get the desired context menu. With IE9 on Win7, clicking on either the headline or the picture yields the useless context menu.
This seems to happen with the main features in the left column on the Ars Technica page, but not with the side stories in the center column. To add to the confusion, the "recent" feature stories in the right-hand column behave the same way in both Vista IE8 and Win7 IE9 as the left-column stories behave in IE8: I can get the desired context menu if I click on the picture, but not if I click on the headline.
What could account for these differences, and is there any way I can recover that "open link in new tab" functionality in IE9? I'd rather open new tabs to get to a derivative page on a website, than have to click the Back button to return to the homepage.
Any ideas?
--JorgeA



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