GOOGLE CHROME OKAY
Posted: Wed Sep 03, 2008 10:00 am
I've installed and am running with the new web browser from Google called "Chrome".
So far, I has functioned with the VP.COM site with no problems at all. I've tested forum navigation, game play and the game CHAT and all are working flawlessly as far as I've been able to determine.
There is one bug in the Chrome software that has been reported and will be supposedly fixed soon...I hope! It has to do with the "scroll" function on touchpads and with the wheels on the mouse. You can scroll down with the wheel, but you can't scroll "UP". You have to go to the slider bar over on the right to scroll back towards the top of the page.
The big advantage to the Chrome browser is that each Tab is process completely in an isolated portion of memory, so if something causes a page to crash in one tab, it will not bother you in the others.
My perception of the browser is that it is more efficient than either Internet Explorer (IE) or FireFox (FF). Pages load faster...much faster. The games here load faster too! But that is probably more a function of more efficient use of memory that may not be so apparent to those with slower connections than I have.
The "look" of the browser is clean. Not a lot of clutter on the top where all the search bars and other tool bars with bookmarks and tab-lists are displayed.
It doesn't have all the cosmetic features that FireFox has with different themes or skins. They may be offered later, but for now, I like the ultra clean appearance.
The FF and IE browsers have an option to always display Bookmarks in a side pane in the current window. Chrome does not have this option which is one that I never used anyway. There is a "button" on the toolbar that will display all of your saved bookmarks. You can also set up a bookmark toolbar that displays across the top of the screen for all of your most used bookmarks.
Installation was simplicity incarnate! You download a little 467KB file and execute it. You "agree" to the usage agreement and it does the rest automatically. It imports all of your bookmarks and passwords you've saved in your old default browser, whatever that was. I was up and running with it in no more than 15 minutes.
One caution that I read about but haven't looked up myself. Someone said there was a clause that gave ownership of ANYTHING that a user uploaded anywhere on the internet using CHROME, became the property of GOOGLE.
I suspect that might be a mis-interpretation of the clause in the agreement or it might be a clause that Google will have to alter. In any case, I don't think I'll upload any books or other potentially valuable information using Chrome until this is resolved.
So far, I has functioned with the VP.COM site with no problems at all. I've tested forum navigation, game play and the game CHAT and all are working flawlessly as far as I've been able to determine.
There is one bug in the Chrome software that has been reported and will be supposedly fixed soon...I hope! It has to do with the "scroll" function on touchpads and with the wheels on the mouse. You can scroll down with the wheel, but you can't scroll "UP". You have to go to the slider bar over on the right to scroll back towards the top of the page.
The big advantage to the Chrome browser is that each Tab is process completely in an isolated portion of memory, so if something causes a page to crash in one tab, it will not bother you in the others.
My perception of the browser is that it is more efficient than either Internet Explorer (IE) or FireFox (FF). Pages load faster...much faster. The games here load faster too! But that is probably more a function of more efficient use of memory that may not be so apparent to those with slower connections than I have.
The "look" of the browser is clean. Not a lot of clutter on the top where all the search bars and other tool bars with bookmarks and tab-lists are displayed.
It doesn't have all the cosmetic features that FireFox has with different themes or skins. They may be offered later, but for now, I like the ultra clean appearance.
The FF and IE browsers have an option to always display Bookmarks in a side pane in the current window. Chrome does not have this option which is one that I never used anyway. There is a "button" on the toolbar that will display all of your saved bookmarks. You can also set up a bookmark toolbar that displays across the top of the screen for all of your most used bookmarks.
Installation was simplicity incarnate! You download a little 467KB file and execute it. You "agree" to the usage agreement and it does the rest automatically. It imports all of your bookmarks and passwords you've saved in your old default browser, whatever that was. I was up and running with it in no more than 15 minutes.
One caution that I read about but haven't looked up myself. Someone said there was a clause that gave ownership of ANYTHING that a user uploaded anywhere on the internet using CHROME, became the property of GOOGLE.
I suspect that might be a mis-interpretation of the clause in the agreement or it might be a clause that Google will have to alter. In any case, I don't think I'll upload any books or other potentially valuable information using Chrome until this is resolved.