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Microsoft has confirmed that it intends to support its Edge web browser on Windows 10 for three additional years beyond Windows 10's end of support date.
Windows 10 launches today (read our review) and with it comes a whole new browser. Sure, Internet Explorer will still be there if you want, but it’s not the default. Microsoft Edge is.
Microsoft has now confirmed that its Edge browser will continue receiving updates on Windows 10 until “at least October 2028,” and Chrome might follow suit.
Microsoft says the Internet Explorer 11 desktop web browser will be disabled on some Windows 10 systems starting today via a Microsoft Edge update.
Microsoft will continue to support its Edge browser in Windows 10 for free until October 2028, according to a support document updated in August.
This means that PCs running Windows 10 22H2 will continue to get Edge updates and that Edge will continue to support progressive web apps (PWA), even after Windows 10 support lapses.
Although Windows 10's support is ending in two months, Microsoft will continue supporting the Edge browser for some time. Here is how long.
Between 50 and 100 million Windows users have switched browsers in recent weeks, just as Microsoft reveals its new warning to ...
Microsoft announced today that a future Microsoft Edge update would permanently disable the Internet Explorer 11 desktop web browser on some Windows 10 systems in February.
That ends today, as Microsoft's support documentation says that a Microsoft Edge browser update will fully disable Internet Explorer in most versions of Windows 10, redirecting users to Edge.
Here's what you need to know about each update to the current version of Windows 10 as it's released from Microsoft. Now ...