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. 😂

  • empireOfLove@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

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

  • mholiv@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    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. 🤷‍♀️

  • Chewy@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    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).

  • astrsk@artemis.camp
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    1 year ago

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

  • BitingChaos@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I set it up with my work profile for Office 365 stuff.

    I’ve given up the hope that Office will ever come to Linux, so instead I’m just trying to use the web version more.

    • thanksforallthefish@literature.cafe
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      1 year ago

      Similarly, when I’m on a contract that requires O365 and teams and doesn’t supply a work device I use Edge strictly for work to quarantine Microsoft away from the rest of my usage on Firefox etc.

  • Captain Beyond@linkage.ds8.zone
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    1 year ago

    Nah it’s proprietary garbage. If it weren’t proprietary it would be an option (although in that case a “deMicrosofted” version would be better). there are free Chromium browsers and free browsers that aren’t chromium, this one offers nothing of interest.

  • NX2@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Yo I’ll install this bs right now if it allows me to watch Netflix into such in 4k. Anyone tried that?

    Edit: Nope that’s not a thing

    FUCK NETFLIX DISNEY AMAZON AND ALL THE OTHERS

    • BlinkerFluid@lemmy.one
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      1 year ago

      Set sail, matey. The actors are on strike anyway. You can afford to hate a corporation or two.

  • 1984@lemmy.today
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    1 year ago

    No… I don’t want to use a browser made by Microsoft. They will turn it to shit as soon as they can get away with it, and I’m happy with Firefox.

  • Gamma@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    I have it on Steam Deck since it can be launched with a CLI argument to force a 1280x800 window.

    Vivaldi pretends to be Edge when visiting Bing to unlock GPT-4, and prefer that to Edge on my other devices. (Secondary to Firefox, ofc)

  • PythagoRascal@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I currently use Edge for mostly one thing, its “Read aloud” feature.

    Because you can use some of the Azure neural voices its currently the best, free, easily accessible text-to-speech available.

    It can even do PDFs quite well. Really helps when I’m too unable to focus for reading long texts but can still listen well enough (ADHD).

    • gerdesj@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I run an awful lot of MS email for a lot of customers. My own company (literally mine) uses Exchange on prem and I pass all access through HA Proxy. My customers mostly use M365 but one is still on GroupWise (I have known GroupWise for roughly 25 years)

      I’ve seen browsers come and go. My first one was telnet on a VAX through a X.25 PAD and a string of connections via the US (I’m UK) to CERN. First graphical browser was Mosaic on Win 95. I think Mosaic became Internet Explorer - MS don’t really innovate - they buy it.

      Edge is basically Chromium with knobs on. Chromium is Chrome with knobs removed (sort of!) I can exclusively reveal that Firefox works fine with all version of OWA and Exchange on-line, because that is what I personally use and so do many of my staff and customers.

      If you have snags with your uni email then there is something specific there and not your browser choice. Edge doesn’t do anything special for OWA it’s just yet another Google browser.

      • LeFantome@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        Ironically NCSA Mosaic ( the first graphical web browser ) became Netscape which became Mozilla which became Firefox. Internet Explorer was mostly written from scratch.

        Around IE5 or so, Microsoft pulled way ahead of Netscape and they basically put Netscape out of business. There was almost no competition for them and they had massive market share which is way IE6 became the anchor weighing down web standards for a decade.

        Firefox eventually brought competition back to the browser market and in fact dominated for a while ( with close to 70% market share ). Most of the rest was Microsoft and, until the end, IE was home grown tech from Microsoft.

        Then Google introduced Chrome which began a long, slow slide in market share for everybody else. Today, IE is gone and Chrome not only dominates like IE used to. Most of the alternative browsers use the Chrome engine ( Blink ), including Microsoft Edge. Firefox is down to low single digit market share.

        At this point, the only real Chrome alternative is Safari which remains popular on the Mac ( and iOS of course ).