Setting a default browser could get easier in future Windows 11 versions

it’s your default —

But it probably won’t stop the OS from reminding you that Edge exists.


Microsoft wants changing default apps in Windows to be less of a mess

One of the enduring legacies of the ’90s browser wars has been an outsize attention to how Microsoft handles default app settings in Windows, especially browser settings. The company plans to make it more straightforward to change your app defaults in future versions of Windows 11, according to a new blog post that outlines a “principled approach to app pinning and app defaults in Windows.”

The company’s principled approach is a combination of broad, vague platitudes (“we will ensure people who use Windows are in control of changes to their pins and their defaults”) and new developer features. A future version of Windows 11 will offer a consistent “deep link URI” for apps so they can send users to the right place in the Settings app for changing app defaults. Microsoft will also add a pop-up notification that should be used when newly installed apps want to pin themselves to your Taskbar, rather than either pinning themselves by default or getting lost somewhere in your Start menu.

The new Settings URI is designed to replace default app workflows like this one from Adobe Reader, which opens an old-school Windows 95-style Properties window instead of the Settings app.

The new Settings URI is designed to replace default app workflows like this one from Adobe Reader, which opens an old-school Windows 95-style Properties window instead of the Settings app.

Andrew Cunningham

These new features will be added to Windows “in the coming months,” starting in the Dev channel Windows Insider Preview builds.

Though Microsoft frames these changes as a way to make changing default apps easier and more consistent, they also serve as a gentle rebuke to developers who handle things differently.

Chrome and Firefox, for example, pin themselves to your taskbar upon installation automatically without asking. Firefox can set itself as your default browser within the app itself, skipping Settings entirely, while Chrome’s “set default” button opens the Default Apps tab of the Settings app without giving you further instructions about what you need to do to change the default settings.

This default app pop-up is handy, but it only appears under specific circumstances.

This default app pop-up is handy, but it only appears under specific circumstances.

Microsoft

Yet another Windows feature will show you a pop-up the first time you try to open a given file type in Windows Explorer, asking you which of the apps on your PC you want to use to open that kind of file. But that window only pops up under specific circumstances and can’t be opened from within the apps themselves; if you try to change your default PDF reader from within Adobe Reader, for example, the tutorial uses an old-school Windows Properties window rather than the Settings app or the newer default app picker.

Changing some kinds of default apps got more irritating in Windows 11—the Windows 10 Settings app had a few broad default app categories that you could change with one click, including browsers, viewing photos, and opening emails. But the Windows 11 Settings app uses a more granular system that sets default apps one file extension at a time.

A later update to the OS made browser switching marginally easier, at least allowing you to set a default browser with a single button by navigating to that browser within the Default Apps area of the Settings app. But the setting was still buried relative to where it was in Windows 10, and it only applied to browsers, leaving image editors and other kinds of apps with the more complex one-file-type-at-a-time controls.

Using these new features isn’t mandatory, and app developers who are handling things differently won’t need to change their apps immediately. But the company says it will begin doing more to block “unrequested modifications to a user’s choices… later this year after application developers have had time to incorporate these new best practices.”

Microsoft will also release an update for the Edge browser that begins using the new Settings deep link and the pinning API once they’re added to Windows. There’s no word on whether the company will stop prompting you to switch to Edge once you’ve installed a different default browser or whether it will stop prompting you to switch back to Bing once you’ve set a new default search engine in Edge.

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