putzerstammer Just my opinion, but there is no such thing as more browsers than we need. ;-)
Microsoft Edge (linux ver)
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Harvey Interesting...I downloaded the browser for my Debian installs from the Opera site, which is located in Norway. I assumed that the browser was now under the Opera company, not the Chinese company.
Edit: Well, now I know. According to a Wikipedia entry, most of the company is Chinese owned. Oh well, it was nice while it lasted. Like WetGeek, I'm removing it from all of my devices.
Edge on Linux: Thoughts from a Linux user
https://vivaldi.com/blog/edge-linux-browser-review/
Solarmass ...twice he says "but it's not vivaldi" thus not recommending it. But at least he wasn't obscuring his bias. And he was thorough. What I like about it is the warts and all honesty more or less. My favorite of a few memorable sentences was "Unsurprisingly the default search engine provided by Edge is Bing. " I didn't love it and I didn't hate it is the sum--but at least that reviewer dug somewhat deep and listed a lot of positives.
@JoshStrobl? my American word "favorite" gets underlined now! This is brand new! I love it. My spell check prefers "favourite." Is this a consequence of the Flarum thing today, or just a coincidental thing with Firefox and language packs on the same day? No complaint, it's awesome it sees me an ocean away, like I'm on 'holiday'
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I'm all-in with Vivaldi now. I have two windows with different tabs on my mini desktop and I can sync (one or both windows and specific tab(s) from each window) while on my laptop - nice little feature. The sync capes are really smooth. I love the stacked tabs and the notes. Features I never used on Firefox I know find indispensable on Vivaldi. So far, super smooth and fast. I was having fun tiling news sites to compare coverage and I added Twitter on my side bar for any time access. It's like Solus, the more I use it, the more comfortable and settled in I get, the happier I am. Solus and Vivaldi...a real nice combo!
Has anyone installed Ms Edge on Solus yet? It's very cool and fast, have web pages read out to you in different languages and voices and handy extensions. You don't need an .eopkg file, just download the latest .deb version and open it with the extractor. Copy the folder "msedge-dev" to somewhere on your home directory. Make a link to %home%/msedge-dev/msedge and you're done. Have fun :-)
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xarai001 I've been using Edge on Windows, Android and iOS for many months, and on Solus for several weeks. The Dev version for Linux is the same version as the Windows 10 Dev version, but a few features available for Windows are not yet available for Linux.
I like Edge a lot, and I am considering making it my default across all the platforms when a stable version is released for Linux.
Rather than attempting to "roll-my-own" and taking on the task of maintaining the package as a new Dev version is released each week, I installed Edge using a Flatpak version that will go into the Flatpak stable repository with the Stable version of Edge for Linux is released.
If you want to install the Flatpak:
(1) Check to see that Flatpak is installed (it should be, unless you removed it).
(2) Install the Flathub BETA repository via the terminal, using these commands:
flatpak remote-add flathub-beta https://flathub.org/beta-repo/flathub-beta.flatpakrepo
flatpak install flathub-beta org.godotengine.Godot
(3) Install Microsoft Edge via the terminal, using this command:
flatpak install com.microsoft.Edge
To stay current, the Flatpak version needs to be updated weekly using the terminal command:
flatpak update
When the stable version of Edge is released, it will update monthly.
Prior to installing Edge on Solus using the Flatpak, I tested Edge on a Ubuntu 20.10 computer dedicated for testing Edge. I have not noticed any performance degradation using the Flatpak on Solus.
Disclaimers: I am not associated with or contributing to the Flatpak project. I have been an active participant in the Microsoft Edge Insider program since April 2019.
Something I noticed.. I have another laptop that I routinely install new distros on for fun. Maybe 6 months ago I had MXLinux installed and installed the .deb version of Edge.
I vividly recall that features that are not available now were available then. I am absolutely certain I synced in my bookmarks.
Any idea why this functionality is gone?
And literally as I write this I realize that Google stripped Chrome APIs from Chromium. But I have to ask... if that is the reason that bookmarks no longer sync in Linux, why hasn't that affected Windows and other versions of Edge as well?
I'm quite confused about this.
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jrsilvey I'm not quite sure that I understand. Microsoft released Edge-Linux on October 20. Sync was not then available on Edge-Linux. Microsoft first introduced MSA sign-in and sync on Edge-Linux three weeks ago. What in the world were you syncing to last October?