This content originally appeared on text/plain and was authored by ericlaw
When you see the update notifier in Edge (a green or red arrow on the … button):
… this means an update is ready for use and you simply need to restart the browser to have it applied.
While you’re in this state, if you open Edge’s application folder, you’ll see the new version sitting side-by-side with the currently-running version:
When you choose to restart:
…either via the prompt or manually, Edge will restart the new binaries and remove the old ones:
The new instance restarts using Chromium’s session restoration feature, so all of your tabs, windows, cookies, etc, are right where you left them before the update (akin to typing edge://restart
in the omnibox).
This design means that the new version is ready to go immediately, without the need to wait for any downloads or other steps that could take a while or go wrong along the way. This is important, because users who don’t restart the browser will continue running the outdated version (even for new tabs or windows) until they restart, and this could expose them to security vulnerabilities.
A pair of Group Policies give administrators control of the relaunch process.
This content originally appeared on text/plain and was authored by ericlaw
ericlaw | Sciencx (2023-03-25T12:41:49+00:00) How Microsoft Edge Updates. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2023/03/25/how-microsoft-edge-updates/
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