Slashdot Mirror


New Chrome Beta Adds Themes, Speed, & HTML 5 Video

adeelarshad82 writes "Google developers are always working on and updating Chrome in three channels — Stable, Beta, and Developer — in increasing positions on the bleeding-edge scale. Today the company thought changes to the Beta channel warranted a post on the main Google Blog. The advances range from the superficial addition of themes for customizing the browser's window borders to even faster speed under the hood to internal support for HTML 5 tags such as <video> and 'web workers,' which allows the browser to divvy processing work among sub-threads."

10 of 207 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Still no Adblock though by Bashae · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Maybe you're asking a little too much from Google. Remember that a significant share of their revenue comes from web advertising...

  2. Still not a Chrome user by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The first thing that really got me about Chrome was how well it seemed to learn my browsing habits. At least, that was my first impression when I booted it up. The first view you get in Chrome is the "most visited websites" page or something like that. As a incognito porn site surfer, I was really taken aback and worried about privacy issues.

    It took a long time in Firefox to fix the URL history functionality. It used to keep the URLs in some cache so that it could be called up right away when you started entering a URL into the address bar. Now, the URLs at least seem like they are gone forever when you delete them from your History.

    IE still has this problem (in addition to completely retarded address bar behavior). In fact, if you delete the entire browsing history at once, the URLs themselves can never be deleted except by completely clearing the cache, but then that also deletes the "cover" sites that I visit to make it seem like my surfing is just innocuous browsing and not the hardcore porn viewing which it ostensibly is.

    So if Chrome wants my patronage, I think the first thing it needs to do is convince me that my personal privacy is safe. That my URLs aren't going to be cached and exposed at some inopportune time, and that it isn't tracking them for me to helpfully find other related websites.

    In this way, I've found Firefox to be the most accommodating browser on the market today. It does what I want and doesn't try to be smart about it. Funny how so many things in life work better that way.

    1. Re:Still not a Chrome user by ethebubbeth · · Score: 5, Informative

      Just put chrome into Incognito Mode (ctrl+shift+n, or do it from the menu). That accomplishes the same thing as Mozilla Firefox in Private Browsing mode and should prevent it from storing history while you porn surf.

    2. Re:Still not a Chrome user by mumb0.jumb0 · · Score: 4, Informative

      As a incognito porn site surfer, I was really taken aback and worried about privacy issues.

      Interesting choice of words. Chrome has an "incognito mode". From the blurb shown when you open the browser in that mode:

      Pages that you view in this window won't appear in your browser history or search history, and they won't leave other traces, like cookies, on your computer after you close the incognito window. Any files that you download or bookmarks that you create will be preserved, however.

      --
      Question everything?
    3. Re:Still not a Chrome user by mdm-adph · · Score: 4, Informative

      Then load up one window in Incognito mode, and another window that's not. I really don't know what you're complaining about. :\

      If you're looking for absolute privacy, don't use the web. Otherwise, Incognito-mode is about as good as it gets (just remember to clear out your Flash cookies from time to time, the browser doesn't control those).

      --
      It is by my will alone my thoughts acquire motion; it is by the juice of the coffee bean that the thoughts acquire speed
  3. Re:Does it install in the right place? by mrak_attack · · Score: 4, Informative

    Installation to the "App Data" folder makes it possible to instill Chrome by users without Admin rights. For installation into Program Files you need admin rights or special permissions tweaking.

  4. NoScript and Adblock by pzs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm a not-very-happy Firefox user, since I find it has horrendous memory leaks. I can get it up to 2GB virtual memory in a morning's average browsing. Yes, I have tried the tips on the Mozilla site.

    However, I have become addicted to a controlled web experience with NoScript and Adblock. I won't be switching to Chrome until I can get similar tools.

  5. Re:Still no Adblock though by markkezner · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While plugins would be useful, I think you have the wrong idea about Google's motives with Chrome. Chrome is Google's bid to change the browser market to make it a better platform for their core business, web applications.

    Google isn't as concerned with making Firefox users switch to chrome, because they are already using a (mostly) standards compliant browser. IE is the real target. This seems to explain why, if I browse to google.com in IE7, I'm greeted with an ad banner that invites me to give Chrome a try. Google does not do this if I browse with Firefox or Safari.

    --
    Dangerous, sexy, turing complete: Femme Bots
  6. AdSweep != AdBlock+ by rshol · · Score: 4, Informative

    Downloaded the latest Chrome Beta (3.0.195.4), installed AdSweep, failed to be impressed. AdSweep loads ads the first time you visit a page in a session then erases them, highly annoying. The biggest problem I had was that I failed to notice any speed difference between Chrome and Firefox 3.5.2 on the sites I visit. If anything my non-scientific observation was that with AdSweep loaded, Chrome was significantly slower than Firefox.

  7. I am willing to accept unobstrusice ads by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I hate the flashing banners, pop ups, pop unders, and distracting flash animations etc as much as anyone. But I do not mind the content providers making a little money selling my eye ball time, if the ads are not distracting and if the ad load is not too much.

    In the non-cyber world, we all accept ads in the magazines and newspapers, realizing the subsidy they provide to the mags and papers. Same way here.

    I wish there is a way to set my browser agent to tell the websites something like:

    Will accept text ads.

    Will reject all animations gif, flash or javascript.

    Will allow 20% of screen real estate to ads.

    Content load time not less than 0.33 times ad load time.

    Currently looking for ads with keywords : digital camera, DVD cases/sleeves, air tickets to India

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact