Google® Chrome for Windows® 7
Google Chrome is an Internet browser by Google which uses the application framework and WebKit layout engine. The name of this browser has been generated from the graphical user interface frame of Internet browsers. Google Chrome was the fourth most widely used browser, with 3.17% of worldwide usage share of web browsers as of October 3, 2009. The latest version of Google Chrome, 4.0.211.2 Beta, is fully compatible with Windows 7.
Google Chrome offers Windows 7 users improved speed, security and stability. Its strength is its JavaScript processing speed and its application performance. Its JavaScript execution performance has been found to be slower with the advent of WebKit Squirrelfish Extreme and Mozilla TraceMonkey JavaScript engines. Although many of the different and new features had been previously announced by other Internet browser developers, Google was the first to apply and publicly release them. Here are some of the features which everyone would love about Google Chrome:
Application Shortcuts
Every time a Gmail page is opened, you can have it in its own window instead of having it opened in a browser or having it get lost among the abyss of opened tabs. You can have an application shortcut of any website in Google Chrome by clicking the icon that resembles a paper in the top right corner, and selecting ‘Create Application Shortcuts’.
New Tab, New Process
Every new tab that you open in Google Chrome is a different process on your operating system. This means you can close a tab if it crashes, and open that particular tab again without restarting Google Chrome. You can manage any tab more easily as each tab is a standalone application.
Google Chrome presents you with the posh “New Tab” page whenever you open a new tab and this page will include a list of recent bookmarks and recently closed tabs, as well as the nine websites that you visit most often. The best part is the search bar for searching through the browsing history. Your browsing history is there on the ‘New Tab’ page every time you open a new one.
Mozilla Firefox has two primary download issues. The first issue is that Mozilla Firefox doesn’t tell where the downloaded files have been stored. Also, it pops up a new window to show the ‘Downloads Manager’ every time you try to download something. In Google Chrome, when you click to download something, it opens up a small toolbar at the bottom of the tab, showing how much time is left and an icon for it. Another click opens the file.
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I am a for long Opera user, but the version 10.1 freezes the taskbar badly on windows 7 64bit. So I was considering other browsers. Hows the true performance of Chrome against Opera? Any comments by those who have used both. I have a fresh system so I dont wish to mess much!
Well, I would say for expandability it’s Opera since Chrome isn’t expandable beyond a few plugins, performance wise it’s Chrome. Chrome is comparatively faster however Opera isn’t far off.