![]() ![]() The lack of URL information can make it difficult to identify the specific Web page you’re going to, especially if the site’s title bar description is not specific (because, say, different sections of the same site have identical title bar descriptors).įor example, earlier today I took a look at our slideshow, Technology for the Obscenely Wealthy. The history results show the title of the page, as well as a thumbnail representation of the page (for most sites but not all it was unclear why some sites were visually represented while others were not), but it doesn’t show the actual Web page address. Chrome goes beyond its Microsoft and Mozilla competition by searching your browser history’s page titles as well page content. This being Google, search is an integral part of Chrome and Google has added some clever features to make searching easier. Chrome does let you right-click to navigate backward, however. The lack of forward and back buttons means that if you browse between pages in a saved Web application you may find yourself a little confused if you want to go back a page. When you create a shortcut for a Web application, Chrome strips away all of the toolbars and tabs from the window, leaving you with something that feels much more like a desktop application than like a Web application or page. For example, I created a desktop shortcut for Google Maps. Ĭhrome’s design bridges the gap between desktop and so-called “cloud computing.” At the touch of a button, Chrome lets you make a desktop, Start menu, or QuickLaunch shortcut to any Web page or Web application, blurring the line between what’s online and what’s inside your PC. You can change your default search engine, too: This option is located beneath the wrench icon, under Options. This page provides thumbnail images of your most frequently visited sites, shows recent bookmarks, and supplies a search field for searching your page history. You can set your own home page, or you can use the ‘most visited’ sites page as your starting point. All controls are buried beneath two icons to the right of the Omnibar (as Google refers to its address bar): a page icon for managing tabs and using Google Gears to create application-like shortcuts from your desktop to a Web site and a wrench for history, downloads, and other browser options. There is no full-scale menu bar and no title bar–and few distractions. Like its Google stablemates, Chrome has a remarkably minimalist interface. ![]() A separate recent-bookmarks box appears at the right of the screen. Chrome’s layout is very simple: You’ll see a row of tabs running along the top, a Web address bar, and a bookmarks bar that runs beneath the address bar. After running through a quick import checklist, Chrome opens on your desktop–and right away you begin to experience the Web in a new way. ![]()
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