The hype has been building around the browser since late last year when Microsoft confirmed that it would be adopting Google’s open-source platform, Chromium, for the next version of Edge. Microsoft hasn’t wasted any time getting the new Edge ready for a public release. The company launched Canary and Developer versions of the browser in April before unveiling a slew of features at Build this week. I got to spend some time with one of the more interesting additions: Collections. Collections is designed to organize and share the mounds of information we come across every day while browsing the web. Using the new Edge browser on a Surface Pro 6, I opened Collections by clicking an icon in the extensions tray. A blank sidebar instantly popped up with an “Add Current Page” button at the top. You can add more than just websites to Collections, like text, by simply highlighting and dragging it into the empty blank. I even added my own annotations by clicking the space between entries, which opened an empty text box. Once I had written a few notes, I went to our sister site Tom’s Guide and added the Best Cameras of 2019 page to the side panel so I could go back and reference those reviews. Once my research was complete, I had the option to export my finding into a Word or Excel document. I honestly wasn’t expecting Collections to be as refined as it is. But just like the Chromium-Edge preview, Collections felt like it was ready to ship, despite having just been announced. While I’m currently a full-time Chrome user, Collections could be the catalyst that brings me to Edge when the browser goes public later this year. I’m not ashamed to admit my indecisiveness, which leads me to spend hours researching products whenever I’m making a purchase. With Collections, I could save a ton of time by compiling user reviews, professional reviews and prices all in one place and easily go back to them when needed. Collections seems particularly useful for students conducting research who need an easy way to save sources without keeping links in a tab or bookmarking them. In fact, the feature will even grab sources and add citations to the bottom of your document after a student exports their list of websites to Word or Excel. Collections is still in the very early stages of testing so we suspect additional features to be added before it goes public. Microsoft reps didn’t provide a firm release date for the new version of Edge, but assured it would be coming “very soon.” Developer beta releases, initially leaked out and now official, provide a way to preview the browser and install Microsoft Edge on Macs.
Microsoft Chromium Edge Browser Hands-on: Big Upgrade with One Problem