It is possible to scroll down a new tab and get a variety of mainstream news at the bottom of new tabs. It's apparently some kind of mainstream news portal owned by Microsoft. It's got a search bar within the tab, a series of icons acting as short-cut to bookmarks near the bottom and at the very bottom there's a row of topics with links to something called "MSN". What you see in new tabs in Edge differs from other web browsers. It's mostly like a plain Chromium with a skin and a slightly different settings menu. There are some minor differences, but it's nowhere near as extended and customized as NAVER whale is. ![]() It's mostly just like Google Chrome, the Brave Web Browser and, to a large degree, NAVER whale. The first thing you will notice when you try Edge is that it looks, feels and behaves just like any other Chromium-based web browser. You have to " Accept and get started" to see what it looks like. It then asks if you want to "send optional diagnostic data" to Microsoft. The Edge browser starts full-screen with a really slow animation the first time you launch it. The current version of Edge Microsoft has made available is based on the very latest Chromium beta version from the Chromium development channel. It's not a secret club, there is a regular download page you can use if you would like to try it. It is currently available Microsoft's Insider Channel. Performance is about the same as what you get with other Chromium-based web browsers. ![]() There are some Microsoft-specific features tied to Microsoft's web services, and that's about it. ![]() The browser itself is not very unique or special, it's mostly just Chromium wrapped in a Microsoft-skin. It's here with packages available for Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora and OpenSUSE. Microsoft kept good on their promise to release a Linux version of their Edge web browser product in October 2020.
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