Monday, May 16, 2011

Advantage Of Using Google Chrome


I didn’t expect this. I fired up Google’s Web browser, Chrome, expecting very little except a stripped down early beta with a plethora of bugs. After playing with it for a while, it’s too early to say that I’m blown away, but I must admit that I’ve stumbled onto some impressive feats which show that the team that built Chrome was intelligent, mature and forward-thinking. Here they are, in no particular order.
1. Blazing fast
Chrome actually uses WebKit for rendering Web pages, the same rendering engine as Safari, which is known to be very fast. Put that in a simple, well optimized, stripped down shell and you get the fastest Web browser around. It loads fast, it displays pages fast, and we’re talking noticeable differences here, which really makes it a joy to use. Don’t just take my word for it, check out some early benchmarks.
2. Chews code like there’s no tomorrow

This one goes hand in hand with being fast, but it’s a little different. Today, it’s not all that important for a browser to render a lot of HTML quickly; browsers are now platforms in which you run applications: two, three, perhaps even a dozen at a time. Therefore, a good browser can handle dynamic content without stuttering and crashing, and from what I’ve seen, Chrome passes the test with flying colors.
True, I haven’t had enough time to test this thoroughly, but the folks over at scriptNode have put together some benchmarks and it seems that Chrome not only handles good code well, it also excels at handling errors.

3. Incognito mode
Click the control icon in the upper right corner of the browser and you’ll get the option to open a new tab, a new window, or a new incognito window. Incognito window will fire up without appearing in browser or search history, and it won’t leave cookies or any other traces of your activity, except files you’ve downloaded or bookmarks. Yes, Safari has it, too, but it’s a nice jab at Firefox which skipped some similar privacy features in version 3.0.
4. Easy to switch
When you’re entering a saturated market with a new product, you can’t change everything. You must carefully balance the features you want to blatantly copy with the ones you want to innovate in. I was pleased to see that Google Chrome was built with this in mind; for example, it’s easy to switch from Firefox, but it does bring enough novelties to make you stick around. Importing your bookmarks from Firefox is easy and works well; and other details, like keyboard shortcuts, are the same. Therefore, Chrome’s learning curve is virtually non-existent; start it up and you’ll be browsing as usual in no time.
5. Intelligent start page

Although not completely original (Opera has got a similar approach to quick bookmarking), Chrome’s start page is a pleasant surprise. Besides the ubiquitous search bar, it gives you a list of most commonly visited Web pages to fire up quickly. Granted, I’ve always hated suggestions of that ilk (for example, I’ve never, ever used the commonly used programs feature in Windows), but here it just works, because the pages you frequently visit really are the ones you want to open first.
6. Has its own task manager
Chrome treats tabbed windows as separate processes. Nice, we’ve already seen that in IE8, right? But Chrome also has a nifty way to see what’s going on: a task manager. Similar to the task manager in Windows, it lets you see which processes are active (inside Chrome), and how much memory, CPU, and network resources they use. Beautiful. You can access it by right clicking Chrome’s title bar.
7. Dragging tabs out and back in again

It’s a little thing, but it warms my heart. You can drag a tab out of Chrome into a separate window, and you can drag a separate window back into tab bar, where it’ll be happily received by Chrome. Stuff like this turns geeks into converts, and Google’s dev team knows that.

Google Chrome Background

Google Chrome Browser

google chrome browser





browserGoogle google chrome has announced a plan to take Microsoft and Firefox with their own gob. Google Chrome gob will be based on existing WebKit rendering engine and integrate not only tab is based browsing but Google Gears and the latest version of Sarekat fluids technology, called Omnibox.
A 38-page comic book online which provides granules of Chrome.

Omnibox, which replaces the address bar and search bar on Google Chrome browser, will provide advice fluids, popular pages and pages of history. Omnibox also will be automatically replicate itself box search for web pages, which allow the page and query string that will be inserted at the same time: for example, entering "amazon", pressing tab and then search for the term are automatically entered into the page search for Amazon's decision to term.
Google Chrome browser will also include some of the more popular features from existing competitors. This will have immediate access nine-homepage shortcut thumbnails along with the history of search for new and recent tabs. Tab itself will move to the upper windows, rather than below as in Firefox. There will be a mod of privacy - which Google calls the "incognito" windows - where there is no record of the surf will be saved. Malware and phishing will be protected against, the browser Google Chrome automatically download a list of pages kept Updated dangerous in the background.
An Updated JavaScript Virtual Machine, called V8, will also become an integral portion of the Google Chrome browser, which has been specifically developed in Denmark. Promising to speed up JavaScript and reduce memory bloat, which will make a significant distinction in webapps. It will also flag up every offender terrace, whether web pages or plug-ins, which use more memory than they should. Chrome will allow webapps to create their own, address and windows toolbar useless, better mimics traditional desktop applications and blur the distinction between the two.
Intended for output as an open source project, Google Chrome browser does not have a specific output chronicle attached to it.

SPEED
Chrome is based on open-source rendering engine WebKit, the same engine used by Apple's own Safari gob and Google Android mobile platform. WebKit recognizable kerana speed, responsiveness and smart memory processing. And Chrome undoubtedtly will use it to make large-scale applications that we often encounter on the Web these days with ease. Increase speed a bit more to experience browsing the JavaScript Virtual Machine called V8, which specifically in-gob expedite achievement JavaScript.
Reactivity
Chrome is also multi-threaded, which means to be doing some process on the same period. Each application is given its own memory and own a copy of global data structures, only kerana will be in a typical operating system. Applications will be waged in their own windows. And if someone should hang or crash will not affect other people, or crash the browser as a whole was partitioned kerana basically dead in the sand tab itself.
USER EXPERIENCE
Chrome has a tab-based design where the tabs appear above the windows URL bimbit and debt plus the Guard. Each tab has its own escort and address bar called "Omnibox" with the characteristics of auto-completion and search for function first and advise. new tab opens displaying the user nine most-visited pages.
PRIVACY / SAFETY
In front of the privacy and safety, Chrome offers the "Incognito" windows, that there is any intimation log browsing. In addition, it allows only pop-up windows are user initiated. And keep a list of dangerous and continue Updated pages to warn users if they have tried for their browser.
STANDARD
Finally, Chrome will merangkumi open source Google Gears runtime host and will be released as Open Source project.
THAT'S NO BROWSER. IT'S AN OS ...
This is a business that seems to strive for a little bit more than Microsoft's Internet Explorer 8 and Mozilla Firefox 3. In fact, with its view of the Web as a web application and its multi-process/multi-application design, Chrome almost seems more of an operating system of the sailor, is not it? Funny, is not it. Google long rumored to have developed a browser and OS. Who would have thought they would be the same.