No complaints from users about not being able to use IE for their web browsing, just complaints about being forced into IE for specific sites. With the Legacy Browser support addon you can even automatically redirect a site to IE if needed and if someone tries to browse to a site not on the IE list that URL will get redirected back to Chrome. I’m running Chrome in my Citrix servers and once you have all your policies setup it is good. You may want to see if the application works in Chrome and if so deploy Chrome Enterprise and Control it with Group Policy. If your customer has an application that only works in Edge that application is likely going to break on the new version of Edge that is based on the Chromium engine instead of Microsoft’s own rendering engine. The only “supported” web browser that isn’t rapidly evolving is Internet Explorer, and the only reason IE is still included is for legacy application support.įor now, your best bet (in my opinion) is Google Chrome Enterprise and control it with Group Policy, install the Legacy Browser add-ons to flip really old websites to IE, etc. There are very good reasons not to include a web browser into a LTSC operating system release. If Microsoft decides to keep Edge as a stand-alone install you will hopefully be able to install and maintain it just like any other application. Server 2019 is already released, so no Edge as a feature. In other words, no new features will be added to a Windows Server release. Microsoft considers Windows Server the Long Term Servicing Channel (LTSC), so Windows Server will have similar policies to Windows 10 LTSC. You won’t see it in Server 2019 as a built in feature, just like no Edge in Server 2016.
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