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Microsoft enhances Edge for “notable performance boosts,” but gains cap at a modest 9% increase in speed.

Web browsers aren’t the most exciting pieces of software we use on a daily basis but if you use one for work, how fast and snappy they are makes the difference between a stress-free day and one that results in a foot through a monitor. So it’s good news that Microsoft has given its Edge browser a handy performance bump, though you’re only looking at 9% at best.

Microsoft announced the success of its coding efforts via a short blog, with the performance claim being ratified via the Speedometer 3.0 web benchmark. Confusingly, though, the reported speeds actually show a 10.5% improvement between Edge v134 and v133 and though the blog is dated 10 April, the latest version of Edge is v135.

An image of a chart showing the comparative performance improvements in Microsoft's Edge browser in the Speedometer 3.0 benchmark

(Image credit: Microsoft)

Given that Edge, like most browsers, automatically updates itself when you open it, I can’t easily verify Microsoft’s improvement claims. However, I can say that Edge is noticeably snappier than Chrome, the browser I have to use for work. Across an average of three runs of Speedometer 3.0, I get a score of 24.3 in Chrome and 27.8 in Edge.


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