Between 50 and 100 million Windows users have switched browsers in recent weeks, just as Microsoft reveals its new warning to stop using Google Chrome. The problem is that this switch has not gone as ...
Editor's take: Browser vendors are rushing to pack more AI features into their products, even though many users strongly dislike the trend. For those web "purists," it might be time to take a second ...
Microsoft Edge might command a fraction of the internet browser space but is slowly gaining ground because of its excellent security settings and other unique features that differentiate it from the ...
Windows 10 allows users to change the default web browser on the system in an extremely flexible and simple way.
Microsoft has introduced Edge Game Assist, a seamless, full-featured in-game browser that will soon be available to all. If you want to use Microsoft Edge Game Assist while playing games in Windows 11 ...
If you end up searching for Chrome in Bing Search with Microsoft Edge, you might start seeing a new advertisement that says ...
From Oct. 31, Microsoft’s Editor extension for Google Chrome and its Edge browser will be retired. These features are being built directly into Edge itself. Don't miss out on our latest stories. Add ...
Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) stock rose over 8% Wednesday after a federal district court judge ruled late Tuesday that Google wouldn't be forced to sell its Chrome browser after ruling divestment a "poor ...
A federal judge ruled Tuesday against the U.S. government’s proposal that Google should sell its Chrome web browser to restore competition in online search, saving the tech giant from having to spin ...
OpenAI and Perplexity are offering Google buckets of money for its Chrome web browser. Credit: Matteo Della Torre/NurPhoto via Getty Images AI companies are throwing multi-billion dollar offers at ...
Imad is a senior reporter covering Google and internet culture. Hailing from Texas, Imad started his journalism career in 2013 and has amassed bylines with The New York Times, The Washington Post, ...
A federal judge on Tuesday largely sided with Google in the penalties phase of its search monopoly case, declining to order the breakup sought by the Department of Justice (DOJ). U.S. District Judge ...