On that note, in my opinion Chrome Frame itself serve's little to none purpose. If you can install it, you could install the actual Chrome (or some other) browser aswell. Websites need to opt-in for using the Chrome Frame for rendering with a metatag, and I think Google will be lucky if even 1% add that tag.
Actually, any page can be rendered with the Chrome Frame add-in by simply adding "cf:" in front of the address of the page you'd like to visit. e.g. cf:http://www.slashdot.org/
For those who don't already know, you can force a page to load with the Chrome Frame (if it's installed of course) even it if it doesn't have the tag embedded in the page by adding "cf:" in front of the address.
e.g. cf:http://www.slashdot.org/
On that note, in my opinion Chrome Frame itself serve's little to none purpose. If you can install it, you could install the actual Chrome (or some other) browser aswell. Websites need to opt-in for using the Chrome Frame for rendering with a metatag, and I think Google will be lucky if even 1% add that tag.
Actually, any page can be rendered with the Chrome Frame add-in by simply adding "cf:" in front of the address of the page you'd like to visit. e.g. cf:http://www.slashdot.org/
For those who don't already know, you can force a page to load with the Chrome Frame (if it's installed of course) even it if it doesn't have the tag embedded in the page by adding "cf:" in front of the address. e.g. cf:http://www.slashdot.org/