Over twenty years ago, the Opera browser got me hooked on mouse gestures, a way for you to perform common browser actions quickly. After I joined the

Mouse Gestures in Edge

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2024-04-25 20:00:38

Over twenty years ago, the Opera browser got me hooked on mouse gestures, a way for you to perform common browser actions quickly. After I joined the IE team in 2004, I fell in love with a browser extension written by Ralph Hare and I later blogged about it on the IEBlog and helped Ralph get it running in 64bit IE.

Many years passed. By 2015, I had abandoned the outdated IE and moved to Chrome fulltime. When I joined the Chrome team in 2016, I was heartened to note that mouse gestures were one of the very few features slated for inclusion in the first version of Chrome. They were repeatedly postponed and eventually cut, with the idea that perhaps a browser extension was the way to go. I installed the most popular Mouse Gestures extension from the Chrome web store only to later discover that it was sending my browser traffic to a questionable server in China. I uninstalled it and reported it to the Chrome Web Store folks who delisted it. Apparently a while later they slightly reduced the data leakage and got it back up on the Web Store, and in 2019 a new hire PM lead on the Edge team suggested we all install it. I took a look at what it was doing and found that it was still engaged in questionable privacy practices. Bummer.

Fast forward to earlier this year, when I discovered that the Edge team has landed gestures in Edge on Windows! I was excited to see the implementation, and feel like it’s one of several features that makes Edge feel like it’s a batteries-included browser. (Unfortunately, this feature presently seems to be Windows-only. If you’re using a Mac or Linux, you should click the menu … >Help and Feedback > Send Feedback to ask for it.)

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