Mark Wilson writes: It’s now a little more than a year since Microsoft first brought extensions to Edge. After so long you would expect the selection of addons to be overwhelming — but that’s far from being the case. In all, there are only 70-odd Edge extensions available, and Microsoft has been moved to explain why. In a blog post, the company almost apologetically explains that it is “building a thoughtfully curated ecosystem,” citing concern over quality and a fear of diminishing the user experience. What some might describe as “slow,” Microsoft refers to as a “purposefully metered approach” to new extensions, and you probably shouldn’t expect things to speed up a great deal any time soon. Colleen Williams, senior program manager for Microsoft Edge, says “We want Microsoft Edge to be your favorite browser, with the fundamentals you expect — speed, power efficiency, reliability, security.” She also adds that “Astute observers of our release notes and active testers in the Insider program may have noticed that some preview builds break extensions temporarily.”
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Source: Slashdot – Microsoft Explains Why Edge Has So Few Extensions