

We look forward to people starting to kick the tires and will be refining the feature set over time based on the feedback we receive.Īlong with what’s visible in the browser itself, we’ve also begun to make contributions back to the Chromium open source project. You’ll start to see differences from the current Microsoft Edge including subtle design finishes, support for a broader selection of extensions and the ability to manage your sign-in profile.

In these first builds we are very much focused on the fundamentals and have not yet included a wide range of feature and language support that will come later. Support for Mac and all supported versions of Windows will also come over time. Beta builds will come online in the future. Canary builds are preview builds that will be updated daily, while Developer builds are preview builds that will be updated weekly. Today we’re embarking on the next step in this journey – our first Canary and Developer builds are ready for download on Windows 10 PCs. Our goal is to work with the larger Chromium open source community to create better web compatibility for our customers and less fragmentation of the web for all web developers. In December, we announced our intention to adopt the Chromium open source project in the development of Microsoft Edge on the desktop.
