News
        
        Reports: Windows 10's Edge Browser Won't Be Available for Some Orgs
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
 - June 10, 2015
 
		
        Microsoft's new Edge browser, which will run alongside   Internet Explorer 11 in Windows 10, will not be available to organizations on the "long-term servicing  branch" option for maintaining Windows 10, according to multiple reports.
"Edge won't be included on LTSB builds," explained Michael A. Silver,  a vice president and distinguished analyst at research and consulting firm Gartner  Inc., via e-mail. In addition, veteran Microsoft reporter Mary Jo Foley got confirmation  directly from Microsoft that   Edge   can't be used by organizations adopting the long-term servicing branch with  Windows 10 in a report on Monday.
Silver, along with Gartner co-author David Mitchell Smith, recommended  that organizations adopt a "bimodal browser strategy" with Windows 10.  In their  June report on that subject, the authors pointed out that the Edge browser  will get feature updates streamed to end users, which is precisely the kind of  software change that the long-term servicing branch was designed to prevent.  Consequently, such organizations will likely use IE 11 instead, which becomes a  "legacy" type of browser.
Microsoft has already announced a July  29 release date for Windows 10. Possibly, the Enterprise edition of Windows 10  will arrive later than that date. Foley, citing unnamed sources,  suggested that the Enterprise edition of Windows 10 will appear in the fall of  this year. Microsoft has previously indicated that Windows 10 would have summer  and fall releases, but it didn't explain why that would be the case. Wes Miller,  an analyst with Kirkland, Wash.-based Directions on Microsoft, an  independent research and consulting firm, indicated in a Tweet that he thought the fall release of Windows 10, namely, the Enterprise edition release,  would occur on Oct. 1. 
Service Branch Options
Organizations with complex software requirements to maintain  may opt for the long-term servicing branch option with Windows 10 because it  will provide the familiar 10-year Windows operating system product lifecycle  support. It also provides greater control over the software update process. Only Windows 10 Enterprise edition users have the long-term servicing branch option.
Other Windows 10 service-branch options include the "current  branch for business" option, which allows for update deferrals for a limited  period of time, plus a "current branch" option, which doesn't permit the  delay of any Windows 10 updates. At least that's the picture of the service-branch options offered recently by Microsoft MVP Andre Da Costa in his Windows  10 FAQ (see table):
  
 
   [Click on image for larger view.] Microsoft's three service-branch plans for Windows 10. (Source: a Microsoft community page FAQ.) 
Microsoft first described its Windows 10 service  branches in February, and later at an Ignite  conference session. However, Da Costa's description is more concise and shows  which management tools can be used with the three service branch choices.
Losing the Browser Edge
Gartner's bimodal browser report explains that Microsoft is  permitting two of its browsers -- IE 11 and Edge -- to run on Windows 10 concurrently for the first time.  It's a reaction to the competitive landscape shift in which IE has lost market  share to competing browsers. The company used to insist that just one version  of IE could be installed on a Windows machine.
Gartner's report is even predicting that IE will lose its market  lead among enterprise users to Google's Chrome browser by year-end 2015. Edge  is supposed to be Microsoft's "modern browser" reaction to stave off browser  market loss, but it just runs on Windows 10 right now, and it could be a couple  of years before enterprises move to Windows 10, the report argues.  Consequently, Microsoft is expected to lose its browser grip on the enterprise  next year.
The report acknowledged the benefits of running a modern  browser. That's why it recommended that organizations take a two-pronged  approach, which means having a technology to support modern apps in browsers as  well as one to support legacy ones.
January Deadline
Organizations trying to tough it out using older IE browser  technologies to run intranet sites or custom Web apps don't have a lot of time  left. That's because Microsoft set a  deadline of Jan. 12, 2016 to move to the most current browser per supported  Windows OS. For Windows 7 users, that means moving to IE 11 by that January date.
IE 11 includes an Enterprise  Mode technology that's designed to help organizations use older browser  emulation modes as a stopgap measure and aid them in moving to Windows 10.  However, Gartner hasn't found that Enterprise Mode is the solution for all of  its clients, according to another  report co-authored by Silver and Smith.
"No, IE 11 with Enterprise Mode does not solve all  problems with IE," Silver said. "There will be many organizations that  won't be on the latest version of IE before support ends."
Gartner advises organizations to just spend the time and  money to move to IE 11 before the January deadline. There are alternatives,  such as virtualization, software modification and resources from software  vendors, but those also cost money, the report argued. 
Browsium's Ion  software  is one possibility suggested in Gartner's report as an  option for organizations needing legacy browser support. Ion is described as a  browser management solution that lets organizations run things like  "multiple versions of Java side-by-side." In a  whitepaper (sign-up required), Browsium argued that organizations with CRM  and ERP systems to maintain may not solve their problems using Enterprise Mode  for Internet Explorer: 
  EMIE  is useful for less complex intranet and extranet websites, and web applications  with minor layout issues. Every enterprise should evaluate EMIE and use it for  the subset of their web applications that it remediates. However, for  mission-critical web applications in complex enterprise IT environments, EMIE  can be insufficient.
Alternatively, it might be possible for organizations to pay  for "custom support" from Microsoft if they can't meet Microsoft's January  deadline. However, that likely will be an "expensive" option, according  to Gartner. Moreover, Microsoft just provides support for "critical"  security vulnerabilities under such plans. In addition, Microsoft hasn't yet announced that  custom support for older IE versions will be available, Gartner's report noted.