Microsoft has released the first Edge builds that are based on Google's Chromium project, the powerhouse of Chrome browser. The Redmond giant has notably brought both Canary and Dev builds of Chromium-based Edge browser that are available for on Windows 10 PCs. While the Canary builds will be updated on a daily basis, the Dev builds will receive weekly updates. Microsoft is also in plans to bring for Mac and all other Windows versions over time. The Chromium adoption was announced in December last year.
"In these first builds we are very much focused on the fundamentals and have not yet included a wide range of feature and language that will come later," Microsoft, in a blog post. "You'll start to see differences from the current Microsoft Edge including subtle design finishes, for a broader selection of extensions and the ability to manage your profile."
Microsoft Chromium to other Windows versions and even Mac devices at a later stage.
In a separate developer-focused blog post, the Microsoft Edge team underlined that it received "great " from Google's Chromium engineers to adopt the new change. "Our plan is to continue working in Chromium rather than creating a parallel project, to avoid any risk of fragmenting the community," the team added.
To embrace Chromium, Microsoft ed the open-source community of the Chromium project in December and has so far added over 275 commits into the Chromium project. The Edge team also contributed towards areas such as accessibility, touch, and ARM64 to enhance Chromium.
Unlike providing the Chromium-based experience through a single channel, Microsoft has adopted Canary and Dev as the two channels. The Canary channel is specifically designed for enthusiasts, though Microsoft says that it uses the same channel internally "to validate bug fixes and test brand new features". Thus, it is not recommended for testing purposes.

Microsoft Edge based on Chromium comes in Canary and Dev builds
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Instead, the Edge team at Microsoft has taken the Dev channel to offer a testing-specific build on a weekly basis. "The Dev channel is still relatively fresh -- it's the best build of the week from the Canary channel. We look at several sources, like , automated test results, performance metrics, and telemetry, to choose the right Canary build to promote to the Dev channel," the team mentioned.
Microsoft also has plans to bring the Beta and Stable channels to offer the Chromium-powered Edge to the masses in the future. Moreover, it is worth pointing out that the existing version of the Edge browser on your device at the moment will remain unchanged -- the experience is exclusively available through the Microsoft Edge Insider Channels.
As VentureBeat option to install extensions from the Chrome Web Store is disabled by default.
Microsoft is undoubtedly embracing Google's Chromium largely, but it nowhere means that the Windows maker is also adding all Chrome OS.
In contrast, Microsoft has included its native services, including Bing Search, Windows Defender SmartScreen, Microsoft service, Azure Active Directory, and Microsoft Activity Feed Service. "While the next version of Microsoft Edge will be based on Chromium, we intend to use the best of Microsoft wherever we can, including our services integrations," the Microsoft Edge team highlights.
Microsoft is also reportedly working on various features such as Fluent Design integrations, Set Tabs Aside, synchronisation with Edge for Chromecast . These are likely to be available in some future Chromium-based Edge builds.
You can macOS will have to wait for some more time.