Google tunes up Chrome development
Google's Chrome development team has offered a status update of its work on the company's young open-source browser.
The most significant changes, according to a Chromium Development Documentation posting on Thursday, include the following:
New version of WebKit.
Form autocomplete.
Import bookmarks from Google Bookmarks.
New network code.
New window frames on Windows XP and Vista.
Although Chrome was just unveiled in September, Google uncharacteristically took it out of beta in December. But while the label may be gone, the company wants to keep that eternal flame burning in the "never-ending Beta test and a continuous feedback loop" via items such as automatic update channels:
With Google Chrome, we want to release fewer features more often instead of making you wait 12 months for the next Major Dot-Oh Release Jam-Packed With Features. We can get your feedback faster, fix things faster, and release new improvements as soon as they're ready. We want Google Chrome to stay nimble so it can keep pace with changes in the sites and web apps you use.
Early adopters can subscribe to one of three update channels:
Stable channel, which delivers features and fixes only after they've been tested. This is the default channel when someone first installs Chrome.
Beta channel, which delivers features from the Dev channel that are "stable and complete" but "may lack the polish one expects from a finished product."
Developer preview channel, which is "where ideas get tested (and sometimes fail). The Dev channel can be very unstable at times, and new features usually require some manual configuration to be enabled."
Jonathan Skillings is managing editor of CNET News, based in the Boston bureau. He's been with CNET since 2000, after a decade in tech journalism at the IDG News Service, PC Week, and an AS/400 magazine. He's also been a soldier and a schoolteacher. E-mail Jon. 



http://www.srware.net/en/software_srware_iron_chrome_vs_iron.php
I use it as my second browser.
Been a user since 1st day of release and I like how fast it is compared to others and I really hope for a Linux or Mac version too.
I consider my Google toolbar to be an essential when I'm running IE.
Chrome has the same (or similar, likely enhanced) pop-up blocker.
If you are looking for a blocker that tries to eliminate ads embedded in website content - you'll never find one that works perfectly, not even in Firefox, and certainly not in IE.
BTW, does Chrome now support RSS subscriptions? The first gold version doesn't.
Adblocker is a Must as is a Mac/Linux version. Do we really need/want another browser?
Disclaimer: I used to work for Dell, currently work for Yahoo!, and am an avid Firefox user. The more alternatives to IE the better IMHO. It's good for the health of the web (read: open standards).
Mark
- by kanstar January 12, 2009 11:16 PM PST
- Firefox is better.
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(12 Comments)Google give all the extensions to Chrome and then we will see if it works faster/better and is reliable :)