That is fairly likely and wouldn’t be the worst thing to do on Mozilla’s part. > During the next 12 months, we will probably see Mozilla quietly preparing a switch to the Blink engine as well, as the forced update of Chromium Edge to Windows users will probably eat into the Firefox marketshare and harm Mozilla’s business model. The Microsoft developers themselves contribute back to the Chromium codebase already, only a tiny fraction of Edge’s features are “Edge-exclusive”, and those capabilities are not needed by most (private) users. > But the Chromium devs will probably try to implement some of the Edge features into Chromium as well. Having an ad-free experience is what users care about most, so Brave will most likely be just fine. If Microsoft goes along with Google crippling adblocking extensions (Manifest V3), then Brave will have an advantage compared to other Chromium-based browsers, in that it can still competently block ads (Brave’s internal adblocker is not an extension). Unless you use some enterprise feature that is exclusive to Edge (likely if you are using business-oriented Microsoft services), there is no advantage in using Edge, on Windows or otherwise. It is unclear if the updates will be made available on the download site at a later point in It will get harder for Brave to gain users, as the interlocking between Edge and Windows makes Edge almost necessary to use when using Windows. The updates that introduce the new Microsoft Edge web browser on Windows 10 devices are only available via Windows Updates and not on the Microsoft Update Catalog website. Check the support articles for optional updates that Microsoft lists as well for mentioned versions of Windows 10. For KB4541302, Microsoft recommends the Octoupdate KB4517389. ![]() ![]() For KB4541301 (Windows 10 version 18), Microsoft recommends the Novemupdates KB4525237 and KB4523205. KB4541301 and KB4541302 have update requirements. ![]()
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