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        Windows 10 'Creators Update' Getting Edge Improvements
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- February 01, 2017
Microsoft this week detailed some improvements coming to its Edge browser with this spring's Windows 10 "Creators Update."
There will be enhancements for end users, along with  standards support for Web application developers. Many of the improvements are showing  up now for "fast-ring" Windows Insider Program testers. Some Edge features  will make the "Redstone 2" (Creators Update) release of Windows 10, which  is thought to be arriving in April. 
 Edge might not be seeing a lot of action among  browsers, though. The U.S. government's Digital Analytics Program, which  just tracks government Web site visits, mostly from within the United States, reported   Edge use at 3.6 percent over the last 90 days. Google's Chrome  browser led the pack with 44.3 percent, followed by Safari (25.9 percent) and  Internet Explorer (15.2 percent), according to those government stats. 
The 3.6 percent use rate for  Edge, as reported by  the Digital Analytics Program, is lower than Net Applications' 5.3 percent figure for December 2016. However, StatCounter's estimate is even lower, with Edge use  pegged at 1.6 percent in December.
Planned for Creators Update
On the end user side, the  Edge browser will have the  ability to preview multiple open tabs in a thumbnail view when the Windows 10  Creators Update arrives, Microsoft  announced on Tuesday. Open tabs can be set aside as a group, to be revisited  later, which Microsoft sees as a way of staying organized and not losing tabs. A  screenshot in Microsoft's announcement showed that tab collections can be saved  from different time periods, such as "yesterday," "3 hours  ago" and "just now."
Users possibly will be able to block Flash use with the  Windows 10 Creators Update. Microsoft had announced this capability back  in December, but it wasn't mentioned in its announcements on Tuesday. The   Edge browser already has the capability to automatically pause Flash ad  content that's not deemed essential. 
Developers can expect to see Content Security Policy Level 2  (CSP2) support in  Edge when the Windows 10 Creators Update is released.  CSP2 is a World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)-recommended approach that's designed  to help ward off content injection attacks, as well as cross-site scripting  exploits, because developers can "lock down the resources that can be used  by their web application," Microsoft explained, in a Jan.  10 blog post. Essentially, developers tag the "allowed source URL  values" in their code. Scripts that don't match the source criteria so specified  will not get downloaded.
Developers also will see WebRTC 1.0 API support in the Edge  browser coming with the Windows 10 Creators Update, Microsoft explained in a  second announcement on Tuesday. In essence, Microsoft will enable video and  audio communications in peer-to-peer scenarios, such as Skype calls between  devices, which will work "across browsers and platforms." The WebRTC  1.0 addition is considered by Microsoft to be "legacy" support, based  on the 2015 W3C standard. Going forward, Microsoft wants developers to consider  using the Object Real-Time Communications (ORTC) approach instead. Microsoft  added ORTC support to the Edge browser back  in 2015.
 Edge also will get support for the "H.264/AVC  and VP8 video codecs" for real-time communications (RTC). The added support  "means video communications are now interoperable between Microsoft  Edge and other major WebRTC browsers and RTC services." There's one caveat  from Microsoft on the support for VP8, an open source codec fostered by Google.  Its use in  Edge may consume more power and CPU cycles because the VP8  codec is purely implemented in software. 
"If your application uses VP8, we recommend testing on  lower-end devices to ensure acceptable performance," Microsoft cautioned.
Microsoft also plans to bring Brotli compression to the Edge  browser with the Windows 10 Creators Update release. It's a lossless data  compression format spearheaded by the Internet Engineering Taskforce. Brotli  compression is expected to improve browser load times because of "20%  better compression ratios," Microsoft explained in its Dec.  20 announcement.
Future Plans
Microsoft also mentioned some still-to-come  Edge  improvements for end users that presently are at the "early stages." It  seems that these improvements will not make the Windows 10 Creators Update  release.
The Edge browser is being designed to support 3D  "virtual and mixed reality." Microsoft is working to add WebVR support, which is described as an  "experimental JavaScript API" for virtual reality devices.
Another capability under development is the ability to buy  electronic books from the Windows Store using the  Edge browser.  Microsoft is testing the ability to control "font sizes, layouts, themes,  navigation control, Cortana integration and more."
Microsoft is also working on a payment checkout service  using Microsoft Wallet on Windows 10 devices that will work with the Edge  browser. It's a PayPal-like service that fills in payment and shipping  information for online purchases.
Lastly, Microsoft touted its Microsoft Edge Extensions partner  ecosystem. It's still a small ecosystem, though. At press time, the Microsoft  Store listed 22  extensions in total.
Missing in action among Microsoft's various Edge announcements  this week was any mention of Windows Defender Application Guard for Microsoft  Edge. It's a virtual machine browser security feature planned for the Windows  10 Enterprise edition that got highlighted during Microsoft's Ignite event in  September. Back then, it was mentioned that Windows Defender Application  Guard would be broadly available sometime in 2017. 
A more complete listing of features under development and  under consideration for  Edge can be found at Microsoft's platform  status page.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.