
And you get the annoyance of Safari not being cross-platform making me lose sync of history, extensions etc between operating systems. I get most of the extensions I need, but some of them just behave inferior in Safari compared to Edge. I still find Apple Safari superior when it comes to speed and efficiency, but there are increasingly more and more sites that don't behave great when using Safari and the state of extensions using Safari is rather lacklustre compared to chromium browsers.

Like why can't Microsoft just accept the fact that I want to use Google for search instead of Bing? Stop nagging me every few weeks asking me if I want to use the "recommended settings". One annoying thing is how Microsoft with almost every update asks me if I want to use "recommended settings" instead of my own settings which pretty much means changing the search engine from Google to Bing. Performance is like any other Chromium browser more or less. Mostly because of vertical tabs that work better than in any other browser.

On a worldwide scale, Chrome provided a share of around 64 percent in the global web browser market as of December 2021.Microsoft Edge is my preferred cross-platform browser. In the European browser market, Chrome and Safari have established strong market positions with 61 and 11.4 percent, respectively. In other countries, Google Chrome has also taken up a dominating role. Historically one of the large players in the segment, Internet Explorer has unfortunately lost its tight grip on the web browser market.Īs shown by the graph at hand, Google Chrome has been the most popular browser in the United States since December 2013. To create a new window: Just hit the menu button in Chrome or Microsoft Edge, then select New Window, or select File > New Window from the. The most popular current browsers are Google Chrome, Apple’s Safari, Microsoft Edge, and Firefox. However, Chrome held a majority of the market share wit almost 61 percent in the same month.Ī web browser is a software application for visualizing websites, documents and data.

Edge was first publicly released in July 2015, with the consumer release of Windows 10. In August 2022, Microsoft's Edge browser had a market share of 14.24 percent in the United States.
