


Ultimately, Microsoft - and it's not the only tech company to think this way - seems to believe that most people won't care, won't pay attention and many will happily try the new Edge without even knowing it. Is it any coincidence, for example, that Mozilla, makers of the far more public-spirited browser, announced 250 layoffs last week? It also wants to decimate the very good people at Firefox. 0 seconds of 1 minute, 13 secondsVolume 0 00:25 01:13 In the Settings tab, click Privacy, search, and services in the sidebar. Moreover, should you want to meet Microsoft's force with an equal and opposite force. In any window, click the menu button (three dots) and select Settings. It wants a big bite of Chrome, which is now known to be a slow memory hog. Some immediately suggested methods to get your legacy Edge back on Windows 10.

Microsoft wants to expand market share in a hurry. And how can one not admire Redmond's attempt to save the children of America by buying TikTok? I'm fascinated, for example, by the Surface Duo, Microsoft's new folding iPadophone. This isn't to say Microsoft is universally awful. Why not entice users to use Edge for a week and see if it's an improvement on their existing browser? If you have confidence in your new product - and Microsoft should have - show it. Why not charm people into trying Edge with Windows 10? Telling them they can't uninstall it isn't charming.
