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Microsoft is building its own Chrome browser to replace Edge

Bullet Club

Banned
Microsoft is building its own Chrome browser to replace Edge

Redmond makes a big change to compete on the web

Microsoft is building its own Chromium browser to replace the default on Windows 10. The software giant first introduced its Edge browser three years ago, with a redesign to replace Internet Explorer and modernize the default browsing experience to compete with Chrome and others. While the modern look and feel has paid off for Edge, the underlying browser engine (EdgeHTML) has struggled to keep up with Chromium. Microsoft is finally giving up and moving its default Windows 10 browser to Chromium.

The Verge understands Microsoft will announce its plans for a Chromium browser as soon as this week, in an effort to improve web compatibility for Windows. Windows Central first reported on these plans, which are codenamed Anaheim internally. We understand there has been a growing frustration inside Microsoft at Edge’s web compatibility issues, and businesses and consumers have been pushing the company to improve things.

Microsoft has only managed to go so far with EdgeHTML, though. Chrome is now the most popular browser across all devices, thanks to Android’s popularity and the rise of Chrome on PCs and Macs. Chrome has turned into the new IE6, and web developers have been favoring its rendering engine to optimize their sites. Google has also been creating Chrome-only web services, simply because its often the first to adopt emerging web technologies as its engineers contribute to many web standards.

Microsoft’s rendering engine has fallen behind as a result, and the company is finally ready to admit this. There were signs Microsoft was about to adopt Chromium onto Windows, as the company’s engineers have been working with Google to support a version of Chrome on an ARM-powered Windows operating system.

Adopting Chromium as the default rendering engine for Windows 10 will end Microsoft’s hostility towards Chrome. Microsoft has regularly pushed notifications to Windows 10 users to attempt to convince them not to use Chrome, and Microsoft pulled Google’s Chrome installer from the Windows Store, because it violated store policies. Those policies restrict rival store browsers to using Microsoft’s own Edge rendering engine.

Source: The Verge
 

PSYGN

Member
As a web developer this is music to my ears, although their recent browsers have been much better. Microsoft helped in bringing us CSS Grid so we should be thankful for that :)
 

Kenpachii

Member
use firebox and chrome. If you have enough ram chrome is by far my favorite browser. Firefox is bloated the constant updating is terrible and it's slower then chrome most of the time.

However the downsize of chrome is more ram usage which on a 8gb system can give you headics. 16gb no issue's so far.
 
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Bernkastel

Ask me about my fanboy energy!
I love Chrome, but I hate that it does not have touch-support. Brave does not sync between mobile and desktop(unlike Chrome) and cant use Chrome extensions even though its based on Chrome(uBlock Origin is a much better adblocker than the default one in Brave). Firefox is buggy. Now, I can finally switch to Edge(the desktop version till now just lacked too many basic features).
 

eddie4

Genuinely Generous
I don't know what you guys are talking about, I still use Netscape.

Kidding, I'm fine with Chrome, does what I need it to.
 

cryptoadam

Banned
I don't know what you guys are talking about, I still use Netscape.

Kidding, I'm fine with Chrome, does what I need it to.

I got you beat, I am still using AOL online! Got my AOL CD ready to load up and my 56K plugged into the phone jack. :)
 

CatLady

Selfishly plays on Xbox Purr-ies X
Will it include all the great data-mining and privacy violations Google is famous for?
 

JimiNutz

Banned
Good move MS. Next they should develop an Android phone. I miss Windows Phones and would be interested in seeing what they would do on the Android platform.
 

Domisto

Member
Google needs more real competition but not sure MicroSoft is what I'd have in mind. Doubt they'll budge me off my Safari/Firefox mix.
 
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