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Microsoft The Internet

Microsoft Edge Will Soon Let You Split Two Tabs In a Single Window (theverge.com) 45

Microsoft has started testing a new split-screen feature for Edge that lets you compare two tabs side by side. The Verge reports: The feature was first discovered by Leopeva64-2 on Reddit, and it's available in an experimental flag in the beta, dev, and canary versions of Microsoft Edge. Once enabled, a new button appears alongside the address bar that lets you split an Edge window into two separate tabs side by side.

Once you've split existing tabs into a single window, it creates a single tab with the combined webpages. That means you can create multiple split tabs in Edge and navigate through them. You can also pin these side-by-side tabs, duplicate them, or add them to groups just like you would any regular tabs. That makes this feature super useful if you regularly compare documents or webpages.

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Microsoft Edge Will Soon Let You Split Two Tabs In a Single Window

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  • They still won't, or can't, fix the download issue. Download a file and either it never completes, or it completes and when you close Edge it tells you it's not finished downloading a file.

    • They still won't, or can't, fix the download issue. Download a file and either it never completes, or it completes and when you close Edge it tells you it's not finished downloading a file.

      They'll get to that riiiight after they finish fixing their nightmare of a printing subsystem that's so old it still defaults to loading drivers from A:\

    • by laxguy ( 1179231 )

      the file finishes downloading and only occasionally on closing the last tab does Edge think it's still in process, at least for me.

  • Vivaldi already does that
    • Re:vivaldi (Score:4, Informative)

      by UpnAtom ( 551727 ) on Tuesday January 24, 2023 @11:53PM (#63238226)

      Opera did it in 1994-ish. Same developers of course.

      • and of course chrome has a plugin that does that already ...

      • I don't think that was the same. As I remember, Opera used to use an MDI type interface so you could have multiple documents open in the Opera window side by side (or however you wanted).

        Looking at the gif in the article, this ties two pages to a single tab. So you can have one tab that's just a regular single page, and then the second tab that will always contain two different pages. Like an online test and wikipedia side-by-side :)

        I guess I can see how that could be useful but just having two browser wind

  • Will this feature also bring World Peace if I frequently use it to compare my Facebook page with my Instagram page at the same time?

    • No, but two tabs at once means twice as many Microsoft ads. So good news for you if you hold a lot of Microsoft stock, bad news if you're just a consumer.

  • YMMV, but ... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Tuesday January 24, 2023 @09:23PM (#63237988)

    That makes this feature super useful if you regularly compare documents or webpages.

    While I have compared two Word documents (in Word), a few times in my life, I have literally never wanted to do that in a browser -- and why would you compare two different webpages? But, to each their own I guess...

    • Re:YMMV, but ... (Score:4, Interesting)

      by mtmra70 ( 964928 ) on Tuesday January 24, 2023 @10:29PM (#63238116)

      Firefox has had a plugin for this for the longest time. Extremely handy if you are punching in data from one system and have to look at another. Or, if you keep jumping between tabs when working on an issue. It also makes a lot more sense when you run a browser full screen on man ultrawide.

      What was cool in the Firefox plugin was that you could even tile them. I would have web UIs up for systems when doing video production technical direction. Run a 3x3 grid of tabs in one Firefox window. GOLD.

    • Because Word documents (amongst others) are also often viewed in a browser now. It's disgusting, but that's how it's done now.
    • My employer requires us to use multiple intranet applications, for which it is very common to paste between tabs. I am constantly swapping between windows because our WfH solution doesn't support multiple monitors.

      Windows 11 does have some form of tiling windows via Windows+arrow key but I should probably re-visit emacs if it supports embedding a Chromium-compatible browser engine!

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      why would you compare two different webpages

      Perhaps one web page is an archived web page and the second is the current webpage. After all, sometimes people just edit, add or remove things to the current web page and hope no one notices.

      Perhaps you thought some feature was in a product you bought, you remember seeing it on the web page but you don't see it anymore. You bring up the archived version and compare, etc.

      Same goes for things like clickwrap agreements and such. Maybe you'd like to know if they chan

  • ... that when Microsoft is talking about tabs, it has something to do with dropping acid?

  • "We can sell 80 percent of of an individuals visual field without inducing seizures"
  • Wtf do we need a browser to do window management when Windows itself will do that just fine? Or xfce in my case.

  • Why does everyone feel the need to reinvent the tiling window manager, but inside programs?
  • Because everything old is new again it is time to bring back MDI from the original Windows

    Which as a fan of MDI I heartily applaud and hopefully someone will (or perhaps has and I am just ignorant of it) create a true MDI browser that instead of just tabs lets you have multiple resizable, overlap-able pages within the MDI frame that you can collapse and restore at will.

    It is one of the primary reasons I stick with my ancient text editor PFE32 (Programmers File Editor).
  • It's called Windows because you arrange your windows. Taskbar also served as a tab, until they combined it, now it's just a popout tab per application.

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

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