Google reforms Chrome for Snow Leopard
Google released an update for Chrome to fix compatibility problems with Snow Leopard on Monday, which along with other fixes shows the gradually maturing state of the Mac OS X version of the browser.
Chrome 4.0.203.4 for the Mac is only a couple notches up the version ladder than the version 4.0.203.2 it replaces, but there are some significant changes in the developer-preview software. For Snow Leopard compatibility, programmers fixed a garbled text bug, said Jonathan Conradt, a Chrome engineering program manager, in a blog post Monday.
Google began Chrome on Windows but has been gradually moving it to Linux and Mac OS X. Those versions so far are still only developer-preview incarnations not ready for prime time yet, though I find myself gradually slipping over to Chrome on my Mac system now that it's getting mature enough for me. I suspect a beta version isn't far off.
Google is fleshing out some basic features, though. One user-interface tweak enables support for command- and shift-clicking.
Another feature coming to the Mac is support for the tab-to-search feature in the omnibox. That lets you perform a site search directly from the address bar by typing a URL, for example news.cnet.com, then the tab key, then search terms.
Tab-to-search also works with Amazon, Google, Google News, and Yahoo, The New York Times, but not Bing yet. I search a lot, and this saves me one step and waiting for a page to load just so I can click in its search bar.
The tab-to-search feature has arrived on Chrome for Mac OS X, too.
(Credit: Screenshot by Stephen Shankland/CNET)The most annoying issue I've found--and let me know if I'm missing something obvious here--is that I lose the file-upload dialog box while using Gmail with Chrome on Mac OS X if I switch away from the application while halfway through. If I don't attach a file immediately, that tab's instance of Gmail becomes useless because I can't get back to it.
Performance still is an issue with the Mac version, though. I was pleased to see some work on new-tab creation speed, with programmer Mark Mentovai using various changes to work the time from 1-3 seconds down to a fifth of a second.
Google is working hard to spread Chrome, though it has small market share at present. It's now installed as the default browser on some Sony laptops, as Endgadget noticed in July with the Vaio NW, and I heard about earlier in August.
Google has been advertising the browser as well and is at work making it the foundation of its Chrome OS.
Stephen Shankland writes about a wide range of technology and products, but has a particular focus on browsers and digital photography. He joined CNET News in 1998 and since then also has covered Google, Yahoo, servers, supercomputing, Linux and open-source software, and science. E-mail Stephen, or follow him on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/stshank. 





And most tests show Chrome being faster than Safari 4.
Besides that, its really personal preference. I like the minimalist UI and the omnibar, which really speeds up searching sites I visit frequently (wikipedia, wikia, images, youtube... Some people might like Safari for... other reasons.
On Windows... he asked what would be the benefit of Chrome over Safari on a SL Mac.. It would have to be a pretty compelling argument.. because the 64-bit Safari.. at least so far for me.. flies.
For Safari, I hate its new-page behavior that often spawns new windows. It's hard for me to switch windows without a lot of mousing or trackpaddery, and I'm a keyboard guy, so I like Chrome there, too.
For JavaScript, given Apple's boasts of its 64-bit version being a lot faster, that could be good. My brief tests show it to be great at Google Docs and Chromeexperiments.com, but I'm not sure how well the architecture scales with many JavaScript-intense sites simultaneously. JavaScript in Chrome on the Mac now is kinda pathetic.
Flash is getting more stable in Chrome on Mac but I still hear gripes. Seems to work for me mostly, though.
LOL!
ASFAIK, the sandboxing of tabs is new with safari 4 in SL. safari 4 in 10.5 did not sandbox tabs.
- by klor5 September 1, 2009 11:17 AM PDT
- In my opinion Safaris/Webkits' killer feature is its' activity window and its' ability to integrate with download accelerators such as iGetter and SpeedDownload.No other browser that I've tried makes it so easy/fast to download files (especially video for me) off the net.I would also like to suggest that there is minimal difference between tabs and windows in most circumstances,just learn "command ~" shortcut to quickly flick through all Safari/Webkit windows.
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(23 Comments)MBP 3.1 Tiger 10.4.11.