The Chrome OS Beta is a Fake, Don’t Download | WATBlog.com - Web, Advertising and Technology Blog in India

Wednesday, October 28, 2009
The Chrome OS Beta is a Fake, Don’t Download | WATBlog.com - Web, Advertising and Technology Blog in India: "If you read this like right now and head to Twitter and search for Chrome OS, you'll find over a 100 tweets getting updated by the second that Google has released a Beta Version of its Chrome OS."

Google Chrome 2.0.172.33 Released

Monday, June 22, 2009
Google Chrome 2.0.173.33 has been released to the Stable and Beta Channels;

Download; Google Chrome 2.0.173.33 This release fixes several serious security bugs.

Google Chrome Updates Video, May 21, 2009

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Bookmarklet for friendfeed - Improved

Friday, May 1, 2009
Friendfeed has a great 'share' feature, that allows users to highlite and post text as well as pictures from visited pages to any of their Friend Feed groups, or main feed. This bookmarklet has the unique feature of being 'drag-able'.

That is to say you can drag the pop-up window to any place on your screen. This is good, because some pics are located in the top-right area of a page, and the standard Friedfeed bookmarklet covers that area and prevents the user from highliting the pic or text.

Drag this to your Chrome Bookmark bar; Share FF


Drag and Drop URLs in Google Chrome Browser

Sunday, April 5, 2009
If you click on the URL in you Google Chrome 'omni-bar', you can drag it to your Bookmarks bar! Bookmarking couldn't be simpler. If the page you're Bookmarking has a symbol displayed in the omni-bar, the symbol goes with the Bookmark! Wow....

Now right-click on the Bookmark, and look in the pop-up window for 'edit'. You can edit the name of the Bookmark ( don't worry, it won't affect the function ).

Right-click on the Bookmarks bar, and look for 'add a folder'. You can create a folder to organize your Bookmarks! You can even put folders within folders ( file them in a way that's most logical for you, that will make it a lot easier to find them later ).

And here's something really good; you can drag URLs from your Chrome Browser window to the Bookmark bar too! That includes those great little java-script marklets that add so much value the fastest Browser available. Do you use Google Reader? Drag this to your Bookmark bar;
If there is a rss feed available for the page you're viewing, this little marklet will find it, and redirect you to your Google Reader.

New beta for Google Chrome

Wednesday, March 18, 2009
From the Google Chrome Blog;
Tuesday, March 17, 2009 | 10:00 AM
"...Since we took the "beta" tag off Google Chrome in December, we've been updating two release channels: developer and stable. With our latest release, we're re-introducing the beta channel for some early feedback — and if you're reading the brand new Google Chrome blog, you are probably just the person to give it a try...more..."
I will be downloading, and testing the new beta release, and will update as time permits. Let me know if you have any problems or suggestions.

Thank you;
Wallace

Deleting Direct Messages on Twitter

Saturday, March 14, 2009
Here is a little marklet that deletes Direct Messages (DM) on Twitter. Just 'drag and drop' the red text below to your Google Chrome Bookmarks bar
Delete DM
Navigate to your Twitter Direct Messages page, and then click-on the marklet. Your side-bar should display instructions that will allow you to delete all, or selectively delete Direct Messages from Twitter contacts.

If you use this marklet, be so kind as to comment here ( or on my Twitter page ). I'm especially interested in whether deleting DMs affects the 'updates' count on a members page. 

Bookmarklets for Google Chrome's tool-bar

Saturday, February 14, 2009
Bookmarklets are an asset to any browser, and I use these two a lot. I found these at Chrome Plugins, so it would be good to keep an eye on that site for more tips and tricks. They made it so simple;

Just Drag-and-drop the red links below to your browser bar!

If you use Google Reader like I do, you probably know about 'sharing with notes'. You can share items from within your reader, or with this marklet you can highlite anything on a web-page and share that portion. This marklet activates a pop-up window with some great features, the one I like the most is being able to 'tag' the item so that you can publish it as a unique rss feed.
Share with Note in Google Reader
Here's my 'tagged' feed ( Exploring Google Chrome ) that I 'share' via the marklet above.

If you use FriendFeed, here's a marklet that allows you to post from any web page. Again, you'll get a pop-up window with instructions. Highlited text will be posted but there's something special about this pop-up! You can post photos from any page directly to FF!
Share on FriendFeed
Remember to check with Chrome Plugins often, they really know a lot!

Google Chrome ( incognito ) Not Cool Enough For Facebook

Sunday, February 1, 2009


If you're trying to visit Facebook with Google Chrome in the incognito mode, you will see this image;

Google Chrome Update Available

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Google Chrome update available, Chrome users need to click on 'About Google Chrome' ( under the wrench, at the top/right of your Google Chrome browser ). 
A pop-up similar to the one above will appear on your browser screen, and the user will be prompted to check for updates. After about a minute of checking and updating the user will be prompted to close, and restart their Chrome Browser to finish the installation.

The process takes less than two minutes. This release includes two security updates. The release notes will have a full list of changes.

Three Processing Modes

Monday, January 19, 2009

Behind the scenes, Chrome can run in three processing modes. The most efficient of these is single process mode. To use this mode, open Chrome's properties in the Start menu and add the string '-single-process' (without the quotes) to the end of the Target box. Now, no matter how many tabs you open, the browser will use just one process.
If you add the string '-process-per-site' to the Target line, Chrome will open a new process for each tab, but if you open the same site in two tabs, it will run them on the same process. The string '-process-per-tab' will force Chrome to create a completely new process and use a new memory space for each tab, which is its default.
Thanks Tech Radar!