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+5 +1
Save What You Write Online With This Chrome Extension
It’s harder than it used to be to accidentally lose all your work. Apps come with auto-save, and Chrome tries to warn you before you close a tab with unsaved work. But hit enter too fast, or suffer a crash, and you could still lose a lot of writing. It can happen to a Facebook update, an application form, or a blog post. But the Chrome extension Typio Form Recovery can save what you write and paste it right back in.
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+3 +1
Google wants to get rid of URLs
We have seen google Chrome and even google itself develop so much in last few years. Google have changed our relationship with the internet with in just few years. When Google Chrome implemented Autofill, ad blocking, Saving passwords, alerts, extensions and web encryption. All of these things, which we now take for granted were ground breaking.
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+1 +1
How to record video from the screen in Google Chrome using Nimbus Screenshot
How to record video from the screen in Google Chrome using Nimbus Screenshot In this video, I'll show you how to record video from the screen in a Google Chrome browser using the screenshot of Nimbus
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+13 +1
Microsoft to ‘warn’ Windows 10 users not to install Chrome or Firefox
Yet another annoying prompt
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+32 +1
Why I’m done with Chrome
This blog is mainly reserved for cryptography, and I try to avoid filling it with random 512px-Google_Chrome_icon_(September_2014).svg“someone is wrong on the Internet” posts. After all, that’s what Twitter is for! But from time to time something bothers me enough that I have to make an exception. Today I wanted to write specifically about Google Chrome, how much I’ve loved it in the past, and why — due to Chrome’s new user-unfriendly forced login policy — I won’t be using it going forward.
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+9 +1
How Google is Turning Chrome OS into a Powerful Tablet OS
Chrome OS, while once thought of as a nigh-useless operating system, is shaping up to be a bold and different OS—one that can handle almost anything you throw at it, especially for tablets. It’s quite possibly the perfect tablet operating system that we’ve been waiting for.
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+32 +1
Chrome will soon ad-block an entire website if it shows abusive ads
Ads that generate fake system messages are included in the ban
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+12 +1
Windows 10 in S Mode works no better for me than Chrome OS
When buying a new laptop, you may have noticed that’s labeled with “S Mode.” It’s a version of Windows 10 that deliberately limits users to installing apps from the Windows Store and imposes certain other restrictions. That’s a weird thing to do when you think about it. Who wants their PC to be more limited, on purpose?
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+18 +1
Google releases Chrome 71 with features to block abusive ads
Along with billing warning screens.
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+17 +1
Google, Mozilla, and Opera react to Microsoft’s embrace of Chromium (updated)
Google and Opera are pleased with Microsoft embracing Chromium for Edge while Mozilla is not happy and points to Firefox as the only independent choice.
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+9 +1
Google Chrome Is Poised to Swallow the Whole Internet—And That's Bad
In 2015, with Internet Explorer a dead browser walking, Microsoft stepped back into the web browser wars with the speedy new Microsoft Edge. Built around a revamped and tuned-up version of the engine that powered Microsoft's web browsers since the late 1990s, Edge was meant to challenge the Google's hegemonic Chrome, potentially sparking a new browser war from which surfers everywhere would benefit.
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+24 +1
Chrome will block spammy ads around the world starting July 9th
After launching last year in the United States, Canada, and Europe, Chrome’s built-in ad blocker will expand to every country in the world on July 9th, Google said in an announcement today. Google started blocking ads last year based on guidelines developed by the Coalition For Better Ads, a trade group the company helped launch. The guidelines prohibit websites from using obtrusive advertising strategies, like employing pop-ups or videos with auto-playing sound.
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+24 +1
Chrome is getting a dark mode for Windows 10 and macOS
Google is testing out a new dark mode for its Chrome browser. 9to5Google reports that both macOS and Windows 10 will get dark mode support, and it’s currently in testing in the latest Canary development builds of Chrome. Google’s browser appears to enable dark mode by default, picking up your system settings on macOS and Windows.
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+37 +1
Chrome will Soon Let You Share Link to Specific Word or Sentence on a Page
Here is a really innovative and interesting Chrome feature that’s getting ready. I cannot explain this new feature in just one sentence, so stay with me. When you share a YouTube video, you now have an option to create a link that will start the video at a specific spot.
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+19 +1
Google Releases Chrome 73 With Support for macOS Mojave Dark Mode
Google today released Chrome 73, the newest stable version of its Chrome browser for Mac and Windows. Chrome 73 has been in beta testing since February, with several new features included. On macOS Mojave, Chrome 73 introduces support for Dark Mode. The browser window will display the darker colored theme automatically whenever Dark Mode on Mojave is enabled. Dark Mode in Chrome looks similar to the darker toolbar available when using Chrome in Incognito Mode.
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+15 +1
How to Enable Chrome's New Dark Mode on Android
Dark mode has stealthily rolled out to the Android version of Google Chrome as a part of the app’s most recent updates. Finally, we can all stare at our phones a little more comfortably, especially at night, without having to enable night-time reader modes or other settings... and I suppose it’s helpful for battery life, too.
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+7 +1
Google Chrome Will Soon Let You Stop Advertisers from Tracking You
First, Google wants Chrome users to have more information about the cookies that third-parties set to follow their antics through the internet. The new tool will also give you the option to block all third-party tracking from marketing companies that use your information to make their money. The Journal reports that Google has been working on this tool on and off for six years now. However, recent privacy controversies, such as Facebook’s infamous Cambridge Analytica scandal...
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+10 +1
Google says it’s done making tablets and cancels two unreleased products
The Pixelbook is the future of Google’s Chrome OS hardware.
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+4 +1
Google: We'll give you better malware protection in Chrome, but only if you sign in
Google brings its Advanced Protection for Gmail to Chrome, but it only works if you're logged in.
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+17 +1
In a swipe at Chrome, Firefox's now blocking ad trackers by default
Firefox is continuing its fight against Facebook and Google's online ad tracking empire. The browser, owned by Mozilla, will now block third-party tracking cookies by default. This Enhanced Tracking Protection will be automatically turned on for all global users as part of the standard setting. The improved privacy features have been trialled on new users since June 2019, and currently cover 20 per cent of users. From today, this will increase to 100 per cent of people using the Firefox.
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