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The new, Chromium-powered Microsoft Edge starts rolling out in production today.
Jim Salter – Jan
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Edge offers password sync now, with an Azure back end. ***********************) Jim Salter(************************“Informational, Inspirational, or Focused” really means “Ads, Pretty Wallpapers, or Just The Interface Please.” ***********************) Jim Salter We
****************** downloadedthe final beta version of Chromium-based Edge — the one available on the afternoon of the th , one day before the official launch — and took it for a spin in a Windows 14 virtual machine. Mostly, it still just looks like a slightly plainer version of Chrome — which isn’t a bad thing! Sites load snappily, UI elements are familiar, and so forth. One of the biggest obvious improvements since the last time we test-drove Chromium Edge is the ability to install extensions from the official Chrome Web store.
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HTTPS Everywhere in the Chrome Web Store. Note that we’ll need to click that top blue bar to allow third-party extensions, before clicking “Add to Chrome.” ***********************) Jim Salter - ************
Sure, we clicked “Add to Chrome” —but we’re actually adding to Edge. ***********************) Jim Salter Success! Most Chrome Web store extensions should install on the new Edge as easily as they do on Chrome. HTTPS Everywhere certainly did. ***********************) Jim Salter Chromium-based Edge is still missing a couple of obvious features to compete with the full Google Chrome experience — most notably, browser history and extensions don’t sync between devices yet. This is described as a temporary problem in the “Known Issues” page, and it may even be fixed already in the production version launching today.
In all likelihood, the change absolutely will improve the lives of the folks who “just click the blue E” in the long run, though. It will likely make it easier for Microsoft to lure more technical users — who demand feature and extension parity but might be interested in Edge’s Azure authentication back-end — away from Google Chrome.
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You can use Chrome extensions in the new Edge — unless they pair with outside-the-browser applications or require Google account login. ***********************) Jim SalterThe Edge Web store is a relatively sad place so far. It’s there, but it’s thinly populated. ***********************) Jim Salter We went looking for the EFF’s HTTPS Everywhere extension in Edge’s new Web store. Instead, it offered us … NBC Sports? ***********************) Jim Salter Microsoft’s own Web store is still extremely sparse — we went looking for the must-have, EFF-developed HTTPS Everywhere, and Instead we got a recommendation for “NBC Sports” —which does not seem well-loved by its users. However, typing “chrome Web store” in the address / search bar took us right where we needed to go and presented us with an obvious tool-tip for installing third-party extensions. That was that — HTTPS Everywhere installed with a single click, just as you’d expect it to on Chromium or Google Chrome itself.
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