Chrome 39 Launches With 64-bit Version For Mac OS X and New Developer Features
An anonymous reader writes "Google today released Chrome 39 for Windows, Mac, and Linux. The biggest addition in this release is 64-bit support for OS X, which first arrived in Chrome 38 beta. Unlike on Windows, where 32-bit and 64-bit versions will both continue to be available (users currently have to opt-in to use the 64-bit release), Chrome for Mac is now only available in 64-bit. There are also a number of security fixes and developer features. Here's the full changelog.
points to the stable channel release notes, last update October 7 and says nothing about 64 bit.
Are the people running unsupported versions of OS X. I guess it's back to firefox on my MBP 1,1 (running OS X 10.6).
I'm starting to think GNU is the problem with "GNU/Linux" these days.
http://googlechromereleases.blogspot.com/2014/11/stable-channel-update_18.html
First, HTML5 videos. I watch a lot of lectures on Youtube, and HTML5 videos have a speed option that most lectures benefit from (30min instead of 1 hour lecture). Sure, Firefox plays HTML5 too - but not as many. Some options are not available.
Second, Flash on Firefox has been *horrible* at least for me lately (I have the latest version of everything, Windows 7 system). After the latest Flash update all I have to do to crash the Flash plugin is right-click over a Flash area. And it's been crashing a lot for me for a long time.
On the other hand, (from a user point of view, not web developer) I often run across bugs in Chrome while the same doesn't happen (to me) with Firefox. So if I could I'd stay with Firefox.
I think as a web developer, especially when you develop modern apps and not just intranet enterprise apps (that are very conservative in what functions they use) Chrome may be more tempting at this point. I'm guessing - I only develop those "boring" apps where the intelligence is in the business logic and on the server and I don't need to do as much in the browser.
Each web tab runs in its own process; you can see the CPU, Memory, per tab. Use: More tools > Task Manager
Looks like Chrome removed the FPS column
Safari now does this in Mac OS X Yosemite 10.01, each website has it's down process named after it that shows up in the Operating System's activity monitor.
Sig: I stole this sig.
While us Linux folks got shafted with the loss of NPAPI support earlier this year, it appears that the Windows and Mac folks still have it.
I keep waiting for the other shoe to drop for them Maybe then we'll see PPAPI versions of common browser plugins.
When you go to google.com/chrome , it will detect your OS and provide you with a appropriate link. however, if you want the 64-bit version of Chrome, you have to click the link below the download link to manually switch it to the 64-bit. Also, very little changes to the page, so it doesn't look like it changed anything when you select it
Fing stupendous.
Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
I've always been a little bugged by how much trouble it is to write JavaScript in Chrome, particularily in an extension ( like my sig says, I write Firefox extensions, and I've been playing with Chrome lately). I woulda thought Chrome would be up on all the new JavaScript hotness...
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
If only Apple had postponed the Intel transition for about 6 months, their machines and software could have been 64-bit across the line, and this mess would have been avoided completely. Instead, we are eight years into yet another transition, with plenty of legacy 32-bit software out there, any of which require an entire duplicate set of shared libraries to be loaded.
It looks like the Chrome team is working on the "let keyword", whereas according to Mozilla's own MDN, they plan to remove the "let" keyword? or they let anyone edit MDN resources.
Does this mean that Java will work in Chrome on a Mac now?
Why should you rely on others opinion when it's free on every major system for you to test it out, and install almost instantly given you don't have an internet connection from the third-world?
As long as the 64-bit version fully supports Flash on all platforms, I'm all for it. Like it or not, you need to support Flash, 64-bit or not.
I guess Red Hat and CentOS 6.x users are left in the lurch on this one.
Kriston
IE is a complete disaster. I use Windows 8.1 and that's the case there.
So yeah, vs that it's fucking obivous. IE is slow, unstable, nasty.
VS Firefox - Firefox is single threaded and mine bugs out completely with the Graphics sometimes or it run some loop where it switches around between the tabs forever. I don't know why and maybe that's due to some add-on but regardless of why it does that and it completely suck.
Chrome is more reliable.
The question is why one should use 64 bit Chrome though. They claim it's faster and maybe it is when it have enough Resources but too me it seemed to use up my Resources quicker and as it did so it's definitely not faster.
Oh, and this is a problem with IE too. For whatever retarded reason it make some Words have a large letter in the beginning.. I've fixed some in this text block but haven't fixed some others.
I have no fucking clue why and it's hard to find out but it's completely retarded of course.
You couldn't be farther from the truth.
Hope Google can open the unlock the searching function in China. Chinese really want to view the world by google.....
@AC: "I finally gave up on Chrome on Windows 7 64 bit. Flash ran terrible and stuttered all the time"
Chrome works fine here on Ubuntu 64 bit.
Time and time again, they just refuse to properly implement CSS3 gradients.
Version after version, no progress on https://code.google.com/p/chro... at all
See http://slashdot.org/comments.p... from version 38.
It's pretty clear at this point, use Firefox or IE10+ if you want good HTML5/CSS3 support. Chrome only cares about what benefits Google and their ability to advertise to you.
Morphing Software