UPDATED 14:10 EDT / DECEMBER 06 2018

APPS

Embracing Chromium, Microsoft pledges to bring its Edge browser to the Mac

Confirming the rumors that it’s rebuilding its Edge browser on Chromium, Microsoft Corp. today shed some light on the big-picture plan behind the move.

Chromium is an open-source project run by Google LLC that serves as the foundation of the search giant’s dominant Chrome browser. The two applications share most of their features, most notably the Blink web page rendering engine and the V8 system for processing JavaScript code.

Microsoft’s planned adoption of Chromium will see these technologies replace the native engines it has built for Edge. That should translate into improvements in speed and battery life, plus fewer compatibility issues. Practically all modern websites are optimized for Chrome because it’s the category leader, while comparatively few are specifically built with Edge in mind.

The shift to Chromium is part of a broader plan by Microsoft to make its browser more competitive. As part of the initiative, the company also intends to decouple Edge from Windows 10. It will take advantage of Chromium’s cross-platform support to make the browser available on macOS for the first time, as well as add compatibility with older versions of its operating system.

The revamp will even change how Edge gets updated. Joe Belfiore, the corporate vice president for Windows at Microsoft, stated that the company will stop tying browser releases with operating system updates in order to let its engineers roll out new features more often.

Microsoft will gradually implement these changes over a period of time. “Our goal is to do this in a way that embraces the well-established open source model that’s been working effectively for years: meaningful and positive contributions that align to long-standing, thoughtfully designed architecture, and collaborative engineering,” Belfiore wrote in a blog post. “Together we seek the best outcome for all people who use the web across many devices.”

In that spirit, Microsoft engineers will collaborate with Google to improve Chromium. It was recently revealed that the company has already started contributing code in an effort to make Chrome and other downstream browsers compatible with Arm-based Windows 10 devices.

Consumers aren’t the only ones who will benefit from Microsoft’s overhaul of Edge. The planned support for older Windows version will enable more companies to make the browser available for their employees, which could in turn boost adoption. Developers, meanwhile, will have to spend less effort making their Chrome-optimized applications work well in Edge.

Photo: Microsoft

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