Oct 27 2019 09:28 AM - edited Nov 01 2019 01:42 AM
The Stable version of the new Edge browser is publicly available to download from Microsoft servers:
Keep Reading, it's not officially available on the front page
and for any reason that Microsoft has, they let it stay online and available for us to test and use it.
So, this is neither an accident, nor a mistake. there are certain rules and security measures that apply to files on a server and Microsoft employees, probably better than anyone else, know how to make a file secure.
Clearly, if Microsoft wanted only their employees to have access to this file, they would have done so long time ago and anyone else would receive an "Access Denied" Error. but as you see there is no such error when accessing that link.
The source of that link:
it consists of 2 parts
so you see, nothing unknown or strange about that link, all very simple.
If Microsoft did not want people to download it, you would get a message like this after clicking on that link:
Reminder:
You are able to Uninstall it and the Latest version of Edge (chromium based) Stable is:
Version 79.0.309.7 (Official build) (64-bit)
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/DeployEdge/microsoft-edge-sysupdate-windows-updates
See the screenshots:
these were all the facts so far about the stable version of Edge insider, hope it shed some light over the whole idea and hopefully we will learn more from Microsoft employees themselves.
Have a nice day!
Oct 27 2019 12:57 PM
Oct 27 2019 01:46 PM
Oct 27 2019 06:20 PM
Oct 27 2019 07:14 PM
@hiren1610 Yes. Once installed, the old version of edge becomes completely unavailable.
Oct 27 2019 07:21 PM
Thanks for confirming this. I would ensure that I won't install it on any of my live systems. May be I will try it on VM.
Interested to know Microsoft's approach on how they will release and replace EdgeHTML when stable version of Edge C will be finalized.
Oct 28 2019 12:40 AM
Oct 28 2019 10:44 AM
@HotCakeX, We have not made the Stable channel public yet, and as you have noticed, installing a build marked as Stable will change the behavior of your Windows operating system. You will also notice that the build is the same as the Beta channel. Thanks - Elliot
Oct 28 2019 12:10 PM
Oct 29 2019 05:56 AM
Now that Elliot has confirmed that Microsoft has not released the leaked "Stable" version of Edge Chromium for testing by Microsoft Edge Insiders and/or the public-at-large at this point, I'm wondering what might be gained by downloading and installing the leaked "Stable" version, and why those who installed it did so.
The leaked "Stable" version (78.0.276.14) is identical, for all practical purposes, to the current Beta version (78.0.276.17). The only significant difference between installing the leaked "Stable" version and the current Beta version is in the installation process itself -- the current Beta version installs as a application and can be uninstalled by normal means, while the leaked "Stable" version changes Windows 10, removing Edge (Classic) and embedding Edge Chromium into the operating system, making it impossible to uninstall through normal means, and requiring a System Restore to return the computer to its prior state.
(1) Because the two are substantially identical, I can't think of anything that would be gained by testing the leaked "Stable" version itself that would not be gained by installing the current Beta version and testing that version.
(2) Because the difference between the two are the changes made to Windows 10 by installing the leaked "Stable" version, I can't think of anything that would be gained by running the leaked "Stable" version in a Sandbox, because the Sandbox blocks the changes to Windows 10 that are the point of testing the leaked "Stable" version.
(3) I can see why a mid- to large- size business customer with significant in-house software and/or system modifications/integration might want to install and test the leaked "Stable" version in a lab environment to get a "heads up" about potential Windows 10 problems before a Stable version is released by Microsoft for testing, but I can't see what a consumer (that is, most of us in this Forum and just about anyone in the public-at-large) would gain at this point by testing an installation process that has not been released for testing, particularly when we can count on the fact that Microsoft will release a version for testing by Microsoft Edge Insiders when the version is ready for testing and we will have ample opportunity to test at the time.
So mine is a question of simple curiosity, asked, in part, because my IS/IT experience was at the enterprise level and my attitudes -- plan carefully, test thoroughly, adopt with caution, stay a bit behind the bleeding edge -- were formed in and by that environment.
Question: To those of you who installed the leaked "Stable" version so far, what did you hope to gain, what did you gain, and would you recommend that others do the same as you did?
Oct 29 2019 06:02 AM
@tomscharbach wrote:Now that Elliot has confirmed that Microsoft has not released the leaked "Stable" version of Edge Chromium for testing by Microsoft Edge Insiders and/or the public-at-large at this point, I'm wondering what might be gained by downloading and installing the leaked "Stable" version, and why those who installed it did so.
The leaked "Stable" version (78.0.276.14) is identical, for all practical purposes, to the current Beta version (78.0.276.17). The only significant difference between installing the leaked "Stable" version and the current Beta version is in the installation process itself -- the current Beta version installs as a application and can be uninstalled by normal means, while the leaked "Stable" version changes Windows 10, removing Edge (Classic) and embedding Edge Chromium into the operating system, making it impossible to uninstall through normal means, and requiring a System Restore to return the computer to its prior state.
(1) Because the two are substantially identical, I can't think of anything that would be gained by testing the leaked "Stable" version itself that would not be gained by installing the current Beta version and testing that version.
(2) Because the difference between the two are the changes made to Windows 10 by installing the leaked "Stable" version, I can't think of anything that would be gained by running the leaked "Stable" version in a Sandbox, because the Sandbox blocks the changes to Windows 10 that are the point of testing the leaked "Stable" version.
(3) I can see why a mid- to large- size business customer with significant in-house software and/or system modifications/integration might want to install and test the leaked "Stable" version in a lab environment to get a "heads up" about potential Windows 10 problems before a Stable version is released by Microsoft for testing, but I can't see what a consumer (that is, most of us in this Forum and just about anyone in the public-at-large) would gain at this point by testing an installation process that has not been released for testing, particularly when we can count on the fact that Microsoft will release a version for testing by Microsoft Edge Insiders when the version is ready for testing and we will have ample opportunity to test at the time.
So mine is a question of simple curiosity, asked, in part, because my IS/IT experience was at the enterprise level and my attitudes -- plan carefully, test thoroughly, adopt with caution, stay a bit behind the bleeding edge -- were formed in and by that environment.
Question: To those of you who installed the leaked "Stable" version so far, what did you hope to gain, what did you gain, and would you recommend that others do the same as you did?
Everyone has their own reasons for trying out this build, the reasons might be personal.
you can't think of any reasons? fine, that's okay, you're not forced to do it anyway.
I explained in my post the caution required with clearly red color and what would the outcome be,
Nov 01 2019 01:37 AM
Nov 01 2019 06:54 AM
Nov 01 2019 07:27 AM
Nov 01 2019 09:24 AM
Regarding the latest version of Stable:
(1) Has this build been released by Microsoft for testing by Edge Insiders?
(2) Is this build supported by Microsoft Edge Insider Support if issues develop?
(3) Is the build 79.0.309.5, that is, the build that Microsoft intends to release to the Beta Channel shortly?
Nov 01 2019 09:35 AM
Nov 01 2019 10:12 AM - edited Nov 02 2019 05:03 AM
@Elliot Kirk Regarding the latest Stable version referred to in this thread (that is, 79.0.309.nn), @HotCakeX has requested that I refer the following questions to you:
(1) Has this build been released by Microsoft for testing by Edge Insiders?
(2) Is this build supported by Microsoft Edge Insider Support if issues develop?
Nov 01 2019 11:11 AM
Nov 01 2019 12:05 PM - edited Nov 01 2019 12:09 PM
@berto82 "Its odd that it is the same version as the dev version which I am using. Dev has been pretty stable for me and will stick with it unless it becomes buggy."
The current Dev build (79.0.309.nn) is being prepped for release as the Beta version, and the unreleased (as of yet) Stable version is usually identical to the current Beta version. The fact that Beta and Stable are the same version brings into question (in my mind) what is gained by downloading the unreleased Stable version, particularly since Microsoft does not appear to have released Stable for testing by Edge Insiders. I plan to wait until Microsoft releases the Stable version to Edge Insiders for testing.
Nov 01 2019 12:09 PM