In December 2014, writing for
ZDNet, technology writer
Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was developing a new web browser codenamed "
Spartan". She said that "Spartan" would be treated as a new product separate from Internet Explorer, with Internet Explorer 11 retained alongside it for compatibility. In early January 2015,
The Verge obtained further details surrounding "Spartan" from sources close to Microsoft, including reports that it would replace Internet Explorer on both the desktop and mobile versions of Windows. Microsoft officially unveiled "Spartan" during a Windows-focused keynote on January 21, 2015. "Spartan" was first made publicly available as the default browser of Windows 10 Technical Preview build 10049, released on March 30, 2015. The new engine used by "Spartan" was available in Windows 10 builds as part of Internet Explorer 11, Microsoft later announced that Internet Explorer would be deprecated on Windows and would not use the "Spartan" engine. On April 29, 2015, during the
Build Conference keynote, it was announced that "Spartan" would officially be known as Microsoft Edge. The browser's logo and branding were designed to maintain continuity with the branding of Internet Explorer. The Project "Spartan" branding was used in versions released after Build 2015. On June 25, 2015, Microsoft released version 19.10149 for Windows 10 Mobile which included the new brand. Version 20.10158 followed on June 28, 2015, for the desktop versions, also including the updated branding. Then on July 15, 2015, Microsoft released version 20.10240 as the final release to Insiders. The same version was rolled out to consumers on July 29, 2015. In April 2018, Edge added tab audio muting. In June 2018, support for the
Web Authentication specifications were added to Windows Insider builds, with support for
Windows Hello and external security tokens. August 2019 saw the removal of Edge support for the
EPUB file format. Microsoft stopped supporting Edge Legacy (for desktop) on March 9, 2021. While the initial release of New Edge on Xbox, as bundled with the September 2021 update, replaced Edge Legacy and marked the end of Xbox System Software support for it. EdgeHTML is written in
C++. The rendering engine was first released as an experimental option in Internet Explorer 11 as part of the Windows 10 Preview 9926 build. EdgeHTML is meant to be fully compatible with the
WebKit layout engine used by
Safari and other browsers. Microsoft stated their original acceptance criteria: "Any Edge–WebKit differences are bugs that we're interested in fixing." A review of the engine in the
beta Windows 10 build by
AnandTech found substantial benchmark improvements over MSHTML (Trident), particularly its new
Chakra JavaScript engine performance, which had come up to par with that of
Google Chrome. Other benchmarks focusing on the performance of the
WebGL API found EdgeHTML to perform much better than Google Chrome and
Mozilla Firefox.
Edge Legacy release history == Performance ==