
And the problem doesn't happen in Power BI Desktop, only when published.Ĭan anyone look at this on Edge team, because now it looks to me its is an Edge only problem. And some reports on Edge are OK, others don't, depending on where the files are hosted. I'm talking about the same report that work in 3 browsers but Edge.
On Chrome, Firefox and Internet Explorer, thi link look like this:
Edge: Broken image icon and url separates the site from file. Chrome: Ok, show images and doesn't break the line when the file name starts. When you use URL as image, to show icons in Power BI, I'm having a problem specific on Edge, and in some reports: As always, you can download a preview version here.Images not showing on Microsoft Edge, but showing in Chrome, Firefoxand Internet Explorer. If you want to get the new Edge now, you can download the stable version here. The browser is coming today for Windows 7, which is no longer supported, and while it's unclear how long Edge will remain supported on the legacy OS, Google has committed to another 18 months of full Chrome support. If you're on any other supported platform, you'll have to go out and get it. Also, it's not exactly a priority, but the new Edge browser for Xbox One and HoloLens will also be coming later on.Īgain, if you're on Windows 10, you're going to see this show up soon through a Windows update, and it will replace the Edge Legacy browser. Two other things missing will be history syncing and extension syncing. It won't have native support for ARM64, so if you've got a Windows on ARM PC, you'll have to stick with Edge Canary or Edge Dev for now. Unfortunately, there are a few things that Edge will be missing out of the gate. There are also new privacy features, and a whole lot more. This allows you to gather up links, images, text, and anything else from around the web and put them into different groups. Of course, IE will continue to ship with Windows 10 for the foreseeable future.Īnother key new feature is called Collections. It's meant for businesses that have legacy needs, so they'll no longer have to use IE. Edge Chromium now has a feature called IE Mode, which will open an Internet Explorer page right within a tab in Edge. There are some other new features to call out though.
Developers can submit their extensions to Microsoft, or you can choose to install them from Google's Chrome Store. Since it's based on Chromium, you'll actually now be able to use Chrome extensions.