
If you want to run a modern version of Chromium and you are on i686, ARM, or ARM64 only a vanilla Chromium (typically compiled and supplied by your distro) or Vivaldi will work. This is in line with most other commercial Chromium-based browsers for Linux (Chrome, Brave and Opera, etc.). My other observation is that only 64bit (amd64/圆4) packages are provided.

I was very pleased to see that they have not alternated the dependencies from standard Chromium, thus assuming that repackaging is not prevented, Edge should work for most Linux desktop users, no matter their distribution.

I was, however, able to test Edge on my Slackware system without issues by extracting out the contents of the deb and running the main executable directly.

It’ll be interesting to see how Microsoft treats users of other distros and if they will allow repackaging (Google actually prohibit redistribution for Chrome, which is problematic for those that need to repackage). Thus you will find active Vivaldi users on Arch, Gentoo, Solus, Slackware, and many others. We also gladly consider bugs from users of any distro that is still supported by upstream for desktop usage. We don’t really care so much about alternative installation options being provided, so long as nothing nefarious is done and the contents of the packages are not modified before distribution (outside of minor mods to allow the build to run or conform to distribution file-system layouts). rpm packages.Įssentially this would appear to be the same as Vivaldi, although while we only offer these package types “officially”, we have long encouraged maintainers of distros using other packaging formats to repackage for their users. Distribution support of Edge on LinuxĪs a long-term user of Slackware, I was not totally surprised to find that (according to the official announcement) only Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, and openSUSE distributions are currently supported by Edge on Linux, which means only. That bias is hard for me to avoid but nonetheless here are my initial thoughts and feelings after playing with the new Edge browser for half an hour. Now, of course, I will be biased – for me, Vivaldi is the best browser for Linux. It’s always great to have an interesting addition to the Linux browser landscape.

Since there has been a lot of fuss about the new Linux entry to the market – the Edge browser on Linux – and being a bit of a browser geek myself, I thought I would give it a spin.
