Sometime this week, Microsoft is ending its support for Internet Explorer 8, 9 and 10. It’s not that the company didn’t tell you it would happen. Word – make that Notice – went out in the summer of 2014. One final round of patches for those versions of IE came out recently, but that’s it. Your options are to upgrade to IE 11 or make the jump to Microsoft Edge.
We recommend making the jump to Edge, which you’ve already done if you run Windows 10. While it has some quirks and limitations, it gives you a couple of good features as soon as you launch it. The first thing you see is “Where to next?” It’s the address bar to go right to a website or you can use it to search. Speaking of searching, you can use Cortana, Windows 10’s virtual assistant. Cortana pops up as you browse with Edge when you highlight a word and choose Ask Cortana or when you type in queries for weather and other common search terms in Edge’s search bar.
You can also have a lot of the features already enjoyed by users of Firefox and Safari. Those features include a Reading List feature to save articles and webpages for later reading, much like Pocket or Instapaper, though it doesn’t work offline. You can see a page in a stripped-down format that removes ads and extraneous banners for easier reading, similar to Apple’s Safari browser on OS X. A note-taking mode lets you doodle and mark up a webpage, then save that image to OneNote or share it though another app. Edge’s native sharing feature makes it easy to post a link to Twitter or Facebook without having to bounce between apps.
Part of the strategic thinking behind Edge is to make it compatible with mobile devices, such as the Surface tablets and Windows-based phones. That has led to a lean, mean browser that loads pages much faster across all platforms. In many ways, Microsoft’s move reflects those of other software publishers, most notably Adobe and Flash, as old standbys give way to new generations.
If you are a Microsoft devotee and have weathered IE and all of its faults, you’ll like Edge a lot better. But beware of those quirks and limitations. Changing your default search engine from Bing to Google, for example, is a chore. You’ll have to go to Settings in Google to make it your default.
It doesn’t have some Chrome and Firefox features, nor does it support extensions or plugins or have the ability to pin tabs. For now, you can’t sync your browsing history or favorite sites with your mobile device – not until Windows 10 for phones launches. Edge also doesn’t play nice with Google’s web apps.
We don’t think the shortfalls are reason to back away from the Edge, but if IE is still your choice, you should upgrade to IE 11. With close to 350 million IE users worldwide, Microsoft is not about to let it just die, but you should consider it a transition from IE to Edge. For most individuals, the switch to Edge should be beneficial with a short learning curve. For organizations that use IE for a number of Internet functions, take this as a warning that you need to make the switch sooner rather than later. We can help you with installing Edge and bringing over the sites you use to drive your business. Give us a call – 973-433-6676 – or email us to ride the Edge to better browsing and Internet utilization.