Winpilot, a popular Windows customizing and debloating utility, has received its latest update. With this latest update, aside from its own improvements, an Edge debloater now comes with it.
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There are some false reports about the new Outlook not working if you uninstall Microsoft Edge (Windows 11 will soon let you do that). Do not believe fake news—you can still run Outlook without Edge.
Even though Microsoft Bob was killed off almost as soon as it was unveiled back in 1995-96, a dev has taken inspiration and has now built a new unofficial app for Windows 11 with the same intention.
Microsoft has announced that it has added support for making WebView2-based apps for its Xbox consoles. The Starx premium streaming media app is one of the first such WebView2 Xbox apps.
Intel has released its new Arc and Iris Xe beta graphics driver 31.0.101.4499 on Windows. It brings big performance gains in some titles, is optimized for CS 2, and fixes a WebView2 black screen bug.
Microsoft is gradually starting to roll out a new way Microsoft 365 Outloook and Teams hyperlinks will open. Announced back in February, these links will default to Microsoft Edge.
A major new version of Microsoft Teams will reportedly be released in a preview version in March. It will have lots of RAM, CPU, and battery life improvements and has been labeled as Teams 2.0 or 2.1.
Microsoft has published a blog post with details about the upcoming end of support for Edge on consumer and server versions of Windows 7, 8, 8.1. The company will pull the plug on January 10, 2023.
November brings a plethora of features for various modules, along with a shift in terms of app color accent, and more information for the service's upcoming infrastructure update to WebView2.
The latest weekly feature update for Microsoft Edge in the Dev Channel is here with various improvements for Sidebar, WebView2, Internet Explorer mode, and all sorts of minor fixes.
WebView2, a Chromium-based control for embedding web content into Windows apps, is now generally available to developers building apps based on WinUI, replacing the original EdgeHTML-based WebView.
Microsoft today announced bringing the Microsoft Edge WebView2 to consumers with PCs running Windows 10. That means developers should no longer bother including dependencies in their apps.
Microsoft has confirmed that it is dumping its new Web-based Whiteboard and going back to the native app based on UWP after the user feedback has been generally negative owing to missing features.
While Microsoft's Edge Chromium WebView2 has been available for C and C++ applications for a month, it's now available for .NET applications, and also as a Fixed Version distribution.
Today, Microsoft announced the general availability of WebView2, its new component that's based on the company's Chromium-based Edge browser. It's available for Win32 apps and coming for more.
Microsoft has released a new SDK for WebView2, the new version of its WebView control that's powered by the new Chromium-based Edge. Like the browser itself, the SDK only works with Windows 10.