Saturday, April 23, 2011

Google Chrome

Google Chrome 8 is not only stable to use, but comes with a full range of competitive features. It lacks some of the fine-tuning customizations in Firefox, but overall, users browsing with Chrome will find it a pleasant, fast, and standards-compliant experience. Review: Now into its second year, Google Chrome has begun to mature from a lightweight and fast browsing alternative into an innovative browser on the precipice of a potential browsing revolution with the pending ChromeOS. The browser that people can use today, Chrome 8, offers highly competitive features including synchronization, autofill, and maintains Google’s reputation for building one of the fastest browsers available. Chrome 8 represents a major milestone point for the browser, but those who are familiar with seeing dramatic changes in major-point updates will be disappointed. New features include the sandboxing of Chrome’s PDF reader, which means that if the PDF you’re viewing crashes, it won’t take down the entire browser. Experimental options, such as side tabs, remoting, disabling outdated plug-ins, and a “tab overview” mode for Macs, have been given a slight refresh by changing the name of about:labs to about:flags. Please note that there are at least four versions of Chrome available at the moment, and this review only addresses the “stable” branch, intended for general use. Chrome beta, dev, and Canary are respectively progressively less stable versions of the browser, and aimed at developers.

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