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Microsoft Edge On Windows 10: The Browser That Will Finally Kill IE by tovick(m): 6:27am On Jul 29, 2015
Windows 10 launches today and with it comes a whole new browser. Sure, Internet Explorer will still be there if you want, but it’s not the default.
Microsoft Edge is.
The timing is almost perfect. On August 16, IE will turn 20 years old. That’s eons in Internet years, and it’s about time that Microsoft shoved it aside.
It’s still difficult to wrap your head around the fact that Microsoft is ditching all the legacy that is IE and launching a new browser build from the ground up. Yet it makes sense: This is a completely necessary step if IE is ever going to have a proper successor.
Despite Chrome’s and Firefox’s gains, IE still
dominates in terms of browser market share , and that’s mainly due to the fact that Windows is the desktop king . Changing the default browser on an operating system is a massive undertaking, especially if that operating system has always been so closely tied to its browser.
You undoubtedly want to know: is Edge any good? The short answer is: Yes, yes it is.
The long answer isn’t so simple. Edge offers a lot of new features and functionality, while remaining a lean tool for browsing the web. Microsoft is finally giving Chrome and Firefox a run for their money, but Edge still lacks in many areas.
We sat down with Drew DeBruyne, director of program management at Microsoft, and Jason Weber, group program manager at Microsoft, to dig a little deeper into Edge.
“Knowing that browsing is still one of the very top activities that people do on a PC, we knew there was an opportunity, and really an obligation, to push the web browsing experience … and so that’s what we’ve done with Microsoft Edge,” DeBruyne told VentureBeat.
He then laid out Microsoft’s three goals with Edge:
1. Build a browser that feels “responsive, fast, and lightweight” but that is also “clean, doesn’t get in your way, and also works great with the modern web.”
2. Build a browser that is trusted and lets people feel safe.
3. Build a browser that is “personal and productive,” fitting in with what Microsoft is trying to do overall as a company.
Oh, and the team wanted to deliver something that is “familiar” (you’ll hear that word used a lot in Windows 10’s marketing) “but still felt fresh.” In other words, Microsoft was attempting the impossible.
Thankfully, it’s a lot easier to achieve the impossible in the first version if you’re building from the ground up. Edge is capable of doing a lot more than IE for one simple reason: The legacy code is gone.
This leaves room to fill Edge up with new features. That said, the most important one — extensibility — still isn’t ready. Developers will “soon” be able to port their Chrome extensions and Firefox add-ons to Microsoft’s browser, but for now Edge is a powerful browser clearly not meant for power users.
Extensions aside, here is what Edge offers.

Cortana
Cortana, Microsoft’s personal assistant, is a big part of Windows 10. So big, in fact, that it’s the only other major feature we wrote about today.
Integrating Cortana into Edge, right in the address bar, is Microsoft’s way of making the browsing experience personal. She is “there to help but not in your way,” as DeBruyne put it.




http://venturebeat.com/2015/07/28/microsoft-edge-on-windows-10-the-browser-that-will-finally-kill-ie/

Re: Microsoft Edge On Windows 10: The Browser That Will Finally Kill IE by tovick(m): 6:37am On Jul 29, 2015
You might be wondering, why didn’t Microsoft put Cortana in a different place in Edge; why the address bar? DeBruyne spelled it out for us: “Second to the start menu, it’s probably the most trafficked place in the Windows user interface.”
In Edge, Cortana can answer 20 different types of queries inline. These include:
Stocks (e.g., MSFT, GOOG, AAPL)
Weather (just start typing the word and get the local weather)
Limited trivia (e.g., how big is the moon, how tall is the Eiffel tower, how old is Oprah Winfrey etc.)
Calculations (e.g., x + y)
Conversions (e.g., tbsp. to tsp)
Time in X country
Definition of X
Flight information
That’s a lot to cram into the address bar, which already does so much. You can expect, however, that this list will continue to grow.

Behind Edge’s address box, a relevance algorithm is constantly running and trying to match what you type to the above types of queries and possible search suggestions. On top of that, it’s searching against your local history and favorites and constantly reevaluating whether you’ve completed your query. This requires “a lot of tuning to make sure as you’re typing so you don’t get a lot of flickering,” DeBruyne explained.
Cortana assists is another way the personal assistant augments your browsing experience in Edge. Just click on her, and she’ll pop up with additional information about the site you’re looking at, which she gleans from
Bing’s entity graph . These extra details can include directions (clicking them will open the Windows 10 Maps app), an option to call the restaurant (via Skype of course), hours of operation, and so on.
To be clear, Microsoft is starting with only one type of site: restaurants. Still, Cortana assists supports 150,000 restaurants, including different physical presences for chains.
This site type was chosen because finding restaurants and booking a table “is a very common task on the web.” When asked what types of sites were next, DeBruyne listed shopping, social, research, and frankly concluded that “we’ve look at all of the common uses of the web.” Because the feature is server-driven, Microsoft can add new sites as well as new classes of sites without even updating Edge itself.
Lastly, there’s Ask Cortana. Whether you’re using a mouse and keyboard (select, right click, choose Ask Cortana) or a touchscreen (select, long press, choose Ask Cortana), on any page anywhere on the web, you can pick some text and get Cortana to tell you more.
For example, let’s say you select the word “Bush” on a webpage. If it’s preceded by Jeb, Cortana will know to give you more information about Jeb Bush, because she’s taking the context of the page into account. But there’s a relevance algorithm working behind this feature as well, so if the page only mentions Bush but never Jeb, Cortana will likely present you with information about Jeb anyway, because she knows that out of all the Bushes, he’s the most likely one you would be asking about right now.
Cortana’s answer is laid out differently based on what you’re asking about (people, stocks, bands, locations, etc.). Again, this information is all coming from Bing. In the worst case, Cortana will look up the definition of the word, and if that fails, she’ll just show you search results.

Re: Microsoft Edge On Windows 10: The Browser That Will Finally Kill IE by tovick(m): 6:48am On Jul 29, 2015
Reading
Reading, and productivity in general, is one of the most common things people do in the browser. “We decided we’d build a set of tools directly into the experience that make reading, and research, and capturing your thoughts really great,” DeBruyne told us.
First off, Edge has a built-in Reading List feature. It’s a simple chronological list of articles the user has saved. Interestingly, Microsoft made a conscious decision, based on user feedback and telemetry it had collected, not to build this into favorites.
It turns out, there’s quite the backstory here.
“There’s such a huge range of use cases for favorites, some people don’t use favorites at all, some people treat it as a junk drawer and search against it, and some people seem to organize their entire lives with favorites,” DeBruyne explained. “It’s pretty incredible.”
“So we decided not to mess with that and add another concept on top of favorites,” he continued. “We did a pretty straightforward implementation of favorites in terms of having hierarchical folders, a favorites bar, and so on. Instead we decided to do a separate concept with the reading list.”
It’s a decent feature, and I’ve personally told myself that once Edge gets extensions, I’ll try to use Reading List more than I do Favorites. Yes, I’m one of those that just stars sites randomly, and never ever goes back to them.
Next up is the Reading View. The goal here is to offer a “very nice, clean, distraction-free reading experience,” DeBruyne told us.
That said, it is lightly customizable: You can change the background, font size, and so on. It works well enough on the desktop, but in DeBruyne’s words it “really sings on a tablet.”
The Reading View button doesn’t light up on sites that aren’t showing an article. If a site wants to prevent Reading View, it can: just add the following meta tag to ensure this always happens when an Edge user visits.
meta name=”IE_RM_OFF” content=”true”
If you’re getting a sense of déjà vu, you’re not alone. The modern browser in Windows 8 (read: not Internet Explorer for the desktop), offered basically the same thing.
In fact, unlike Cortana, these reading features aren’t unique to Edge. Edge’s reading list is just a list and Edge’s reading view is like all the rest: It just strips out all the junk, and voilà.

Re: Microsoft Edge On Windows 10: The Browser That Will Finally Kill IE by tovick(m): 6:50am On Jul 29, 2015
Notes
In the same productivity vein, Edge has a web notes feature. Any page on the Internet can be taken into the web note view, where the user can use a bunch of tools for annotation.
This is supposed to be a simplification for the process that currently goes a little something like this: Grab the URL, copy random parts of the webpage, paste everything into a note-taking program, and annotate it there.
With Edge, the whole experience is in the browser. You can mark up the page and save it either to your Reading List or your favorites.
You can also send the marked-up page to OneNote, and other programs including email. Unfortunately, your annotations are all flattened. This means you can’t make any changes, as the marked-up page is really just an image.
Microsoft “settled on using a flattened image because it’s the most ubiquitously readable on the receiving side,” DeBruyne told us. That said, he did say a non-flattened version “could be possible in the future.”
So far, Windows 10 testers have been using this feature to annotate articles, for shopping purposes, and of course just to mess around with images of people on the web. Microsoft is hoping, however, that it will be end up being used in unforeseen ways too.

Re: Microsoft Edge On Windows 10: The Browser That Will Finally Kill IE by Nobody: 7:00am On Jul 29, 2015
Internet explorer is always dead and buried less than a month after release. Infact I know no one in recent years who uses it as their default browser. The same fate lies for this edge browser or whatever they call it.

Microsoft should start giving people the option of uninstalling or not even installing their browser to begin with; it'd make for smaller file downloads of their operating systems.
Re: Microsoft Edge On Windows 10: The Browser That Will Finally Kill IE by Bawss1(m): 9:56am On Jul 29, 2015
charix:
Internet explorer is always dead and buried less than a month after release. Infact I know no one in recent years who uses it as their default browser. The same fate lies for this edge browser or whatever they call it.

Microsoft should start giving people the option of uninstalling or not even installing their browser to begin with; it'd make for smaller file downloads of their operating systems.

Really? How large is the IE file in Windows.

How can you without even seeing or using Edge make such a dismissive remark? Are you that heavily biased?
Re: Microsoft Edge On Windows 10: The Browser That Will Finally Kill IE by Nobody: 11:05am On Jul 29, 2015
Bawss1:


Really? How large is the IE file in Windows.

How can you without even seeing or using Edge make such a dismissive remark? Are you that heavily biased?

We're here together na. Wait the next two months. Chrome and Firefox're always light years ahead of any browser microsoft comes up with. Microsoft also never updates their browsers, only move higher in versions.

I don't know how big the IE file is in Windows but I'd guesstimate over 200MB maybe more. Do a google search as I'm not interested in finding out.
Re: Microsoft Edge On Windows 10: The Browser That Will Finally Kill IE by Bawss1(m): 3:57pm On Aug 08, 2015
charix:


We're here together na. Wait the next two months. Chrome and Firefox're always light years ahead of any browser microsoft comes up with. Microsoft also never updates their browsers, only move higher in versions.

I don't know how big the IE file is in Windows but I'd guesstimate over 200MB maybe more. Do a google search as I'm not interested in finding out.

*facepalm*

We are really in a deep mess in this country.
Re: Microsoft Edge On Windows 10: The Browser That Will Finally Kill IE by Nobody: 4:13pm On Aug 08, 2015
Bawss1:


*facepalm*

We are really in a deep mess in this country.

Your point is?
Re: Microsoft Edge On Windows 10: The Browser That Will Finally Kill IE by tovick(m): 2:25pm On Aug 24, 2015
Bawss1:

*facepalm*
We are really in a deep mess in this country.
You can install the updates from the new OS versions.

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