Thanks for this interesting post @Brink. I am always considering Edge as an alternative to Chrome, not least because Microsoft figures so prominently in mainstream software development which matters to me.

I just wish that Microsoft were less pushy for dominance, which I find immensely irritating in so far as this leads to invasive and overly controlling strategies in pursuit of that.

It is solely for that reason, and in so far as how it manifests and interferes with with my workflow just keeping that syndrome in check that I have, so far, not succumbed, and go out of my way to resist, in favour of Chrome. I also have Chrome Yellow installed, and it augers propitiously in respect of forthcoming web technologies that Edge seem not to be at pace with.

This alone is odd. Edge seem, even now, to major focus upon business and security, "Microsoft Edge, the browser for business, is designed with organizational security and management in mind", alas, not with end user experience and security in mind. And therein lies a strategic positioning faux pas IMHO.

It seems myopic, to my mind, to imagine that any business organization would be more interested in aligning with Microsoft's somewhat narrow concept of security for businesses, regardless of the experiences and security interests of the ordinary end-users, potential and actual customers.

As, now retired, an ex-business person myself, I wonder why I would ever want to risk losing the trust of end-users by marginalising their interests?

It is not the case that the security interests of any organization are vested in any browser, of whatever lineage. That is only dependent upon any organization's own IT systems and infrastructure.

At the end of the day, what any business needs is happy customers, not ones left feeling being overly controlled and restricted only in favour of commerce. Just marketing fodder. And this is Edge's downfall IMHO. It's the wrong strategy, a one way street to being rejected. Security for businesses is not dependent upon any browser. That is just one link in the chain of many other equally important considerations.

It seems to me that this strategic niche positioning of Edge is headed up a dead end street. The business security statistics alone will never make Edge popular. That is dependent upon end user experience as much as for commerce.

Meanwhile, I watch Edge constantly and it will be interesting to see how this all pans out.

Christophe.