Skip to main content

A Windows 10 update brings Microsoft’s excellent new Edge browser to the masses

The new Microsoft Edge browser, which is based on Google’s open-source Chromium engine, is making its way to more Windows 10 PCs. Now being delivered via Windows Update, the browser is coming as an automatic install, replacing the older and little-used legacy version of Edge.

Recommended Videos

With the new browser previously only available as a manual download, there are three specific updates that will bring the browser automatically to Windows 10 PCs. These include KB4541301, KB4541302, and KB4559309. Depending on which version of Windows you’re running, you’ll see a different KB in Windows Update when you visit Update and Security and click Check for Updates if you’re hoping to get the browser automatically.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

According to Ghacks, KB4541301 is for Windows 10 PCs with the April 2018 or the October 2019 Updates. KB4541302, meanwhile, is for the May 2019 or the November 2019 Update. Finally, there’s KB4559309, which is for all newer Windows 10 versions.

In all cases, once you install any of these KB updates, and restart your Windows 10 device, the old legacy Microsoft Edge will be hidden in favor of the new Edge. However, all of your existing passwords saved websites, and information will carry over into the new browser automatically.

There’s quite a bit to like with the new Edge browser, which recently surpassed Firefox in market share. On its support page, Microsoft highlights some improvements.

“This new version provides best in class compatibility with extensions and websites. Additionally, this new version provides great support for the latest rendering capabilities,” Microsoft said.

Compared to old Edge, though, the new Chromium-based Edge is quite different. It’s now powered by the same browser engine as Google Chrome, while adding some unique features to the experience. This includes improved performance, a cleaner and easy to understand user interface, and more ways to customize the experience with Microsoft Store and Google Chrome extensions. Much like Google Chrome, the web browser is also now separate from the operating system, so it’s always getting new updates on a monthly basis.

Microsoft is planning new features for the browser that helps separate it out from Google Chrome. These include new integration with Pinterest in the Collections feature of Edge, as well as a right-click context menu to activate a Sidebar search feature for looking up words and phrases. These features will be coming to the other beta Insider “channels” of the browser first, and a later point for everyone else.

Arif Bacchus
Arif Bacchus is a native New Yorker and a fan of all things technology. Arif works as a freelance writer at Digital Trends…
There’s a scary new way to undo Windows security patches
Windows 11 logo on a laptop.

Security patches for Windows are essential for keeping your PC safe from developing threats. But downgrade attacks are a way of sidestepping Microsoft's patches, and a security researcher set out to show just how fatal these can be.

SafeBreach security researcher Alon Leviev mentioned in a company blog post that they'd created something called the Windows Downdate tool as a proof-of concept. The tool crafts persistent and irreversible downgrades on Windows Server systems and Windows 10 and 11 components.

Read more
Microsoft backs off on pressuring Windows 10 users to upgrade
Windows 11 and Windows 10 operating system logos are displayed on laptop screens.

Microsoft has announced that it will ease up the aggressive add tactic to get Windows 10 users to upgrade to Windows 11 after receiving negative backlash from users, as Windows Latest reports. There is no official word on whether stopping the full-screen multipage popups is permanent, but a plan to “share a new timeline in the coming months” was mentioned.

Windows 10 Home users saw these ads, but some Pro and Business users also saw them after rebooting their computers. Regardless of who saw them, the ads’ pause comes as the Windows 10 end-of-life date, October 14, 2025, approaches.

Read more
PC gamers still prefer Windows 10 over Windows 11
A man stands in front of a gaming PC.

Windows 11 saw a decline in the latest Steam hardware and software survey for July 2024. According to Valve's data, gamers using Microsoft's newer operating system dropped below the 46% threshold. Currently, Windows 11 accounts for approximately 45.81% of all Windows users on Steam, marking a decrease of 0.82% from the previous month.

In contrast, Windows 10 experienced an increase of 0.74%, reaching a 50.16% share. Although gaming performance is generally similar on both operating systems, a recent test by Hardware Unboxed reveals that Windows 10 may offer better performance in certain titles due to the core isolation feature, where memory integrity is enabled by default on Windows 11.

Read more