A price comparison and a screenshot tool are coming to Edge -

Geeko

Microsoft continues its campaign to push Internet users to turn to its Internet browser, Edge.

And to get there, the Redmond firm now seems to be betting on native features rather than on “forcing” and the inability to remove Edge from Windows.

On the program for the next version of Edge: a price comparison and a screenshot tool.

The first new feature will allow you to compare the price of the same product on different sales sites via a dedicated column.

You just have to click on the button "compare prices with other retailers" to verify that the site on which you found such or such object is the cheapest.

If not, you can simply click on the best deal in Edge's price comparison tab.

A price comparison and a screenshot tool are coming to Edge - Geeko

This functionality will unfortunately be limited to US retailers at first, but Microsoft assures that other online sales sites will be integrated into the service later.

In addition, a coupon system will also be put in place.

A screen capture tool designed for the web

The other great feature to land on Edge is the screenshot tool.

The point is that there are already many solutions to take a screenshot, whether it is a keyboard key or simply the "Screen Capture Tool" found on Windows.

But the Edge option differs from these solutions because it will allow you to take a screenshot of an entire web page.

It will therefore be possible to scroll a page while capturing it.

This will prevent Internet users from taking several captures one after the other.

A price comparison and a screenshot tool are coming to Edge - Geeko

In addition to the addition of these two features, Edge will also welcome some minor new features in its next update which will roll out later this month.

These include better support for PDFs, the integration of Pinterest into Collections or the ability to customize the new tab page with your own photos.

High-Tech

Microsoft will allow its employees to telecommute permanently

High-Tech

Edge: Behind Chrome, Microsoft's browser is now more widely used than Firefox

  • Windows

  • Computer science

  • Microsoft

  • Navigator

  • High-Tech