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Microsoft will continue to support the new Microsoft Edge in Windows 7 even after the operating system reaches the end of life tomorrow.
Microsoft announced this week that it has released previews of its Chromium-based Microsoft Edge Web browsers for use on Windows 7, Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 systems.
While a leaked support page has stated that the new Microsoft Edge browser will only work on 64 bit versions of Windows 10, tests show that the leaked build also run on Windows 7.
The new Chromium-based Microsoft Edge is coming to Windows 7 and Windows 8.1 PCs via Windows Update.
Microsoft launched Edge based on Google's Chromium open source project for Windows 7, Windows 10, and macOS. This is Edge 79 stable.
After Google announced that it will continue support for Chrome on Windows 7 for at least 18 months, Microsoft has confirmed that it will support its new Edge browser for the same amount of time.
Today, Microsoft made its intentions clear for the Chromium-based Edge browser on Windows 7.
The changelog has made it clear that Edge 110 is the first version of Microsoft's browser to ditch Windows 7, 8, and 8.1 support.
Right on schedule, Microsoft today released the first stable version of its new Chromium-based Edge browser, just over a year after it first announced ...
Microsoft has shown old-fashioned aggression in trying to get Windows 10 users to adopt its new browser. Now, even Windows 7 users are finding it a little much.
The new version of Microsoft Edge is now available for Windows 10 and macOS, but it'll take a while for Microsoft to replace the browser on every device.
Thanks to its new Chromium underpinnings, Microsoft's new Edge browser can now handle Chrome extensions on Windows 10 and MacOS.