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Chromium Microsoft Operating Systems The Internet Windows Build

Microsoft's Chromium Edge Browser Now Available On Windows 7 and Windows 8 (theverge.com) 58

The Chromium-powered Edge browser is now available on both Windows 7 and Windows 8 for testing today. The Verge reports: The release comes two months after Chromium Edge first debuted on Windows 10, and a month after it appeared on macOS. Microsoft is releasing the daily Canary builds initially, and plans to support the weekly Dev channel "soon." You can download the installer over at Microsoft's Edge Insider site. "You will find the experience and feature set on previous versions of Windows to be largely the same as on Windows 10, including forthcoming support for Internet Explorer mode for our enterprise customers," explains a Microsoft Edge team blog post. While most features will be the same, dark mode is missing and Microsoft says there is no support for AAD sign-in.
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Microsoft's Chromium Edge Browser Now Available On Windows 7 and Windows 8

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Windows 7 is about to hit end of life, and everything after 7 sucks pretty hard. I switched my home PC to Fedora Linux about a month ago. I'm never going back.

    I have had problems that required technical know-how to fix, and that were next-level compared to anything that ever happened under Windows. I still think that Linux is not ready for the desktop and may never be, just because of that. But I am smart and I figured it out, and I also got all my recent games running through Lutris and Proton, so it's

    • Windows 8.1 experience is not much different from 7. There are ways to put the start menu back in. The extended support will last until 2023.

      • Unfortunately, you can't buy new PCs with Windows 8.1 any more, nor upgrade to it, so it's of limited help as an alternative to 10 for the nearly-half of all Windows users who are still running 7 today.

        • That's true. But at the same time, I don't advise throwing away your old Windows 8 PCs or upgrading them to 10.

          • Time moves on. Windows 8.1 kernel and it's features excluding it's desktop start screen was my favorite. Fast boot with uefi if you turned off csm bios emulation. Hyper-v, and stability.

            However, you miss out on visual studio 2019, store apps like One Note, wsl Linux, and many features if you work in the technology field. For example if you want to learn sccm the labkit VMS require Windows 10 1709 later version for Hyper-v underneath it

            If you don't work in the technology field then maybe no but most alashdot

        • by Ed Avis ( 5917 )
          Windows 10 with Classic Shell and the visual effects turned off seems to work OK as a workstation OS. I can't see much difference between it and Windows 7.
      • In Windows 8.1, I used Classic Shell. Problem there is that even w/ that, one still has to toggle b/w desktop and metro mode. Windows 10 did fix that aspect, and I use Classic Shell w/ 10, and that part works pretty smoothly.

        Problem is that a lot of the stuff they had w/ Windows 8.1 has either devolved, or just completely gone away. For instance, the News app on Windows 8 allowed you to pick your preferred news sources, and showed you just that. Whereas now, in the era where former tech companies have

    • Windows 7 is about to hit end of life, and everything after 7 sucks pretty hard. I switched my home PC to Fedora Linux about a month ago. I'm never going back.

      I have had problems that required technical know-how to fix, and that were next-level compared to anything that ever happened under Windows. I still think that Linux is not ready for the desktop and may never be, just because of that. But I am smart and I figured it out, and I also got all my recent games running through Lutris and Proton, so it's good enough for me.

      I endorse it for anyone who is not afraid of technical troubleshooting. Being free from Microsoft's spying and general pushiness is totally worth it.

      Precisely, how exactly does it make sense to release something for 2 OS versions that they themselves ended? Also, how many Windows 8 users are there who didn't move on to 10? I know a lot of 7 users who refused to upgrade and for good reason, but for 8? There, there was no reason to stay.

      Unlike you, I went the FreeBSD route (first PC-BSD, then TrueOS when it changed). Except for WiFi, the whole thing works, and the only thing I really use my other Windows laptop for is Steam, and occasionally when I

  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Wednesday June 19, 2019 @10:00PM (#58791568)

    Now it's going be a whole new experience opening Microsoft's browser to download Firefox. Well done! ;)

    • If one wants to download Firefox and is still on WIndows 7, one can just do it from Internet Explorer. Just use Internet Explorer once to download Firefox, and Firefox every time beyond that.
  • by Blinkin1200 ( 917437 ) on Wednesday June 19, 2019 @11:13PM (#58791788)

    Already have some browsers on my Win 7 systems. None of the browsers I use are made by Microsoft. iexplore never made it to the setup phase and will stay that way.

    • So did you have CDs of Firefox or Chrome or whatever else you used? Or did you use a previously downloaded package from an USB drive to install them? In other words, how else did you download whatever browsers you use?
  • Microsoft knows there is a large amount of enterprises and power users who don’t want Windows 10. Internet explorer hasn’t been updated since 2013 and so is missing a lot of newer standards. If Microsoft was really cool they would release it for Windows XP users as well.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Someone Entered a Bus Somewhere!

    A Tree in a Forest Continues To Grow!

    Sand Now Available on Sahara!

    I think the last one is even more interesting than this article. Nobody cares for Microsoft's faulty bloated products anymore. Nobody.

  • It's funny/sad to see how hard they're trying now to get people to use their edge browser. Everyone pokes fun at Apple's RDF, but Microsoft seems to have one just as large, because they are completely oblivious to what people genuinely think about their products.

    Unless you are very young, you know exactly what happened during the IE6 years, and I for one will *never* use another browser made by Microsoft. Ever. I don't care if has the ability to make gold bullion shoot out my USB port. The way they have

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