The roll out is gradual, but you can check to see if it’s
available in your country by navigating to settings > profiles > sync and
enabling “history” and “open tabs” in the options.
Not every country has access to the additional sync features
just yet, but we understand the UK is one of the first markets that will see
history and tab sync initially.
These new features will let Edge users sync all web pages
they’ve visited to additional Windows 10 or macOS devices, or even to the
mobile versions of Edge for iOS and Android.
You will need to head into the settings section on all
devices you use Edge with to manually enable the history and open tabs
features, though. This includes the mobile versions, where you’ll have to
toggle open tabs and history, too.
Microsoft initially launched Edge on January 15th, 2020
without many important sync options enabled. Extensions sync arrived in May,
and Microsoft originally promised history and tab sync would start rolling out
in the summer.
The web history and tab sync eventually started rolling out
to beta and dev channels of the browser in late November, and are now appearing
in the stable channel.
Microsoft continues to improve Edge on a regular basis,
recently adding a really useful screenshot tool and a price comparisons
feature. Edge will also soon be updated with vertical tabs and new password
breach notifications.
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