
Others tried to compete (most notably, Netscape), but ultimately, MS was too big and powerful for them. I'm not saying it's ideal, but it's just the way things have always been, practically since the beginning of the modern Internet (the first few years were quite free, but then MS became interested and wanted to control the browser market, and the rest, as they say, is history. All the others were marginalized, with tiny slivers of market share- much the same as now, it seems.) It seems that, among desktop PCs/laptops, there are three choices: Firefox based (which won't be much of an option much longer, with the way they keep jerking off their loyal user base by removing basic features that basically define what Firefox is without those features (XUL/legacy extensions and advanced UI customization abilities, to name a couple), Firefox is little more than a distantly-related variant of Chromium), Chromium based or Apple's Safari (which is Webkit based I believe Webkit is a derivative of Chromium, or vice versa, so maybe this one doesn't count?) I'm not sure what Opera is based on, but I think current versions are Chromium based, yes?Īnyway, I suppose it's not unprecedented (look at the first "browser wars": we had IE and Netscape. Supported Server OS: Windows Server 2016, 20 Supported operating systems: Windows 10 and Windows 11 Surfing game is available to play, just enter this URL: edge://surf Microsoft Edge Enterprise and group policies X64, x86 and arm64: Microsoft Edge Canary Setup - Without telemetry (Updated Daily, except for weekends) X64, x86 and arm64: Microsoft Edge Dev Setup - Without telemetry (Updated Weekly) X64, x86 and arm64: Microsoft Edge Beta Setup - Without telemetry (Major Updates Every 4 Weeks)

X64, x86 and arm64: Microsoft Edge Setup - Without Telemetry *There is no x86 version of Windows 11, thus not supported!

Microsoft Edge Chromium Stable, Beta, Dev and Canary downloadsĪll Channels are supported on 圆4 and x86* on W indows 10 and 11. ARM64 is supported on both Windows 10 and 11!
