When making payments with a card on Microsoft Edge, the Wallet feature will ask if you want to use a saved card instead of entering a new card number, and CVV. Users can include their own cards manually, or Edge will request to save card details you enter when making purchases. Considering Microsoft does not have its own payment platform, this is the closest the company has come. I will also file this as a useful Microsoft Edge feature. The browser has loads of tools, some of them not really necessary. Wallet is different as it makes for a more efficient browsing experience. Aside from being a web browser, Edge is now also… well, nearly everything else. Whether you find the myriad features useful or think of them as bloatware (the reality is somewhere between), Edge is a fully stocked browser experience.
Available Now
In terms of the Wallet feature, it is now rolling out to select users in the United States, with A/B testing. This means while it is running in the Canary channel, it is now available to all users who have access to Canary builds. Only devices included in Microsoft’s limited A/B testing ring can try it out. Either way, it is clear this feature is on its way so I expect a full preview release in the coming weeks. A final end-user push should come in a couple of months. Tip of the day: Headsets are a vital tool for communication and can cause stressful moments when they don´t work as planned. In our tutorial we are showing you how to properly set up a headset on your Windows PC so this will be a thing of the past.