Additionally Microsoft pay attention to developers. Chrome Devtools has has a Headers tab, with response headers and then request headers. There's a seperate tab called 'Response' which only contains the response body. I fed this back to Google (suggesting a request and response tab with headers and body) and (per Google) the response was from an engineer saying they personally liked it so therefore there was no reason to change it. Microsoft's feedback was they're actually looking at more logical layouts.
They must be bragging about it, or something.
It reminds me of all those 'best viewed in Internet Explorer at 800x600' from the beginning of the century.
Why would those people not use the chromium browser?
Have you filed a bug report with specifics of the poor behavior you experience, so that Mozilla engineers can potentially investigate the issue?
I mean Microsoft has the upper hand compared to Google or AWS because they are better at GDPR and privacy shield stuff. Microsoft is also miles better in terms of enterprise support, but it’s those reasons and not their solutions that sell.
Settings -> Advanced -> Allow Chrome Sign-in
If you want even more control use ADMX (enterprise policies) to permanently disable it. For example on Windows visit Software\Policies\Google\Chrome\ in either HKLM or HKCU and set SyncDisabled 1, EnableSyncConsent 0, BrowserSignin 0.
Full list/docs:
My sync password is different from my account password, I think it generally unlocks both at once if your sync password is the same as your account password, and you log in to your Google account.
I think this is also possible with the way that Microsoft has made "Edge" work with Microsoft accounts rather than Google accounts.
If there is one specific website that requires Google Chrome, you could use Google Chrome for that and use Mozilla Firefox for everything else?
I can't remember seeing sites that break Safari, but I'm sure I'm just lucky.
Telemetry can be disabled on Enterprise: https://www.kapilarya.com/allow-or-prevent-telemetry-in-wind... but I agree it would be good for Microsoft to allow this to be disabled in Pro.
edit: Besides that, the telemetry service has caused multiple problems on different systems already. I just don't see any results from it compared to previous versions of windows.
Not willing to compromise security to run Brave which it seemed the workaround at the time did.
Edge is literally Chrome with Microsoft slapped on top of it.
Video: https://edgetipscdn.microsoft.com/insider-site/images/whatsn...
Telemetry & spying is everywhere with everything that they build now even in their calculator[0][1].
I would stick to Ungoogled/Chromium, Safari or Firefox thanks.
The motivation seems to be to establish a solid consistent foundation layer for Microsoft to deliver cross platform Electron apps, like Teams and VS Code. EdgeHTML is no good for that, so it got ditched for Chromium.
I wonder if Google saw this vulnerability years ago and so they decided to build Chrome to protect themselves.