I recently discovered that you can get Microsoft Edge for Linux (🤢🤮) and am curious… does anyone here use Edge for Linux, or have you ever? What was your reasoning for using it?

EDIT: Well, you all have provided some interesting perspectives I hadn’t ever considered. Including one which means I’ll have to install Edge, so… thanks, I guess. 😂

56 points

Probably a godsend if you’re a web dev. No more rebooting or running a second PC/VM for compatibility checking.

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29 points

Na, edge users don’t file bug reports 😂

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14 points
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11 points

Should have redirected to FF tho

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3 points

At least you can take comfort that you probably contributed to saving her from some ie malware in the future

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3 points

They are the bugs!

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12 points

The only possible use case I can think of, but I’d still want to restrict the thing to its own VM out of paranoia.

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4 points

isn’t it just chromium though?

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4 points

Yes it is, but with extra Microsoft!

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42 points

It has a slightly better privacy policy compared to google chrome while fully supporting progressive web apps on Linux. Edge is also very much so more efficient in terms of system resource utilization. It also has high quality native built in translation which I need. All of this means I use Edge as my PWA browser.

Chromium lacks native translation support. Firefox PWA support is not good. Edge was the least bad option for me. 🤷‍♀️

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11 points

How is edge more efficient? It’s literally chromium

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16 points

Chrome is basically Chromium+bloat so this doesn’t surprise me.

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9 points

And Edge is chromium + Microsoft Bloat.

One could argue using it on Windows means only allowing M$ to spy on you, theoretically. Though I would not be surprised if M$ uses a custom version of Chromium including Google trackers, so the opposite of degoogled chromium.

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14 points

Based on.

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9 points
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With the same amount of tabs with the same sites Edge uses fewer resources. I think Microsoft did some fine tuning or something. It’s not just just me that sees this either.

This is a 2 year old link but it shows the difference. https://www.tomsguide.com/news/chrome-firefox-edge-ram-comparison

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2 points
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3 points

The core browser is still good, but they keep changing and adding annoying things and doing questionable privacy things like sending images to their servers “for enhancement”. For a while they removed the ability to remove sync data, but I think it may have been added back again after backlash.

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4 points

Brave has PWAs, but I’m not sure about the translation support

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16 points

True. But brave is run by a crypto advertising company. Their business model is advertising and crypto tokens. I trust crypto bros less than I trust Microsoft.

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5 points

I trust crypto bros less than I trust Microsoft.

Why trust either? #firefox

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33 points

In my opinion no proprietary browser is worth using.

Chrome isn’t better in any way than Edge, as both don’t respect it’s users privacy and decisions (dark patterns, etc).

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I agree.

If a browser ain’t open source, I ain’t gonna use it and neither should anyone else.

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30 points

I use Edge daily for work. Everything it Office 365 and there is of course no Outlook client or Word or whatever on Linux. So I use the web version for everything. So I might as well have Edge to do the Microsoft since surely MS must make sure their stuff works on their own browser, right? (right??).

I also use the PWA version of Teams since the native client doesn’t really work well and since somewhat recently is also “officially” unsupported.

Anyway, it keeps the MS stuff separate from my normal browsing with Firefox and I’ve disabled JavaScript in Edge for all non-MS stuff. It works pretty well. Took me some battles to get rid of the Bing sidebar but they finally made that an option you can set.

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10 points
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This is the reason I use it too.

I first installed it when the Teams web client stopped working properly in Firefox. I installed Edge, and it worked well. Also noticed Teams in Edge allows me to turn on background blur, where that was disabled on Firefox and Chrome in Linux. Then I tried PWAs, and found the Edge support for installing and running PWAs is second to none, so now I run Outlook 365 and Teams as PWAs.

Firefox is still my primary browser, but I don’t use Chrome anymore. Edge has become my chromium-based browser of choice. Somehow Microsoft has built a better Chrome than Google does.

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6 points

Try installing a User Agent switcher into your browsers and then fake your browser ID. FF works fine with Teams, Exchange and M365 - I have been an IT consultant installing or using all of that lot for over two decades.

I too have a favourite browser. It used to be FF up to about 15 years ago (v2 or so) then Google were cool and I went all in on Chrome. I then went Chromium. I actually started out with telnet but that’s another story.

A couple of months ago I finally dumped Chromium and co and went back to FF. Biggest win for me was a slightly less opinionated SSL experience. That needs some explaining:

I run a lot of IT and that means a lot of SSL certs. Mostly I use Lets Encrypt if I can as well as the usual suspects. Sometimes a site does not need SSL at all. Googles browsers are very VERY opinionated about this: “Thou shall not use thy browser password manager with self signed SSL certs”. FF has a slightly less opinionated “Thou canst TOFU and thy password manager will work”. I spend a lot of time pissing around with uploading CA certs to group policy objects and copying them to /usr/local/share/ca-certificates and getting the machines to trust them. On Arch we use /etc/ca-certifictes etc and so on and so forth. I also have to deal with Teams - FF works better now than Cr browsers

I’ve returned to FF after a very long time and I don’t regret it at all. I run Arch actually!

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4 points

Same here. Work allows BYOD, so I use my Linux laptop for work stuff. I use Edge for accessing all work stuff and running M365 PWAs. I especially like how Teams in Edge runs so much better than the standalone Electron app, which is horrible.

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2 points

Damn, this thread just got me to install Edge for a better Teams experience.

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4 points
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4 points

This is a very frustrating limitation of every PWA implementation I’ve seen. They need to respect the default browser setting for external links!

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2 points

Yeah that is annoying. I just copy the link and paste in Firefox. I don’t ever need to go back I find since I only use Edge for MS365 stuff.

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2 points

But wouldn’t Chromium be less telemetry then?

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2 points

That’s how I use it too, but I was surprised to see that it doesn’t have syncing of bookmarks, history etc yet!

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29 points

I use Edge on Linux as my user agent in Firefox on Windows just so I can give some engineers a laugh.

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