![]() Opera is brilliant at rendering raw RSS feeds, Firefox will auto-open the feed in your default RSS reader, IE will show a formatted view of the XML file but raw feeds in Chrome are often difficult to understand.ħ. Reading Blog Feeds - It’s not uncommon to find search results in Google that point to RSS feeds. How do you save all your bookmarks to a folder so that you can easily resume work later?Ħ. Creating Bookmarks - You have a bunch of tabs open in Chrome but have to close the browser so that someone else in the family can use the system. Google is probably trying to keep the contextual menu in Chrome simple but a menu item like “Image Properties” is extremely essential.ĥ. View Image Properties - Unless you know how to interpret HTML, it’s hard to find basic properties like the dimensions or the file size of any image that’s displayed on a web page inside Chrome. Email a Page or Link- The good old email is still the most preferred mode for sharing web pages on the Internet yet Chrome offers no native option for sending pages or hyperlinks by email.Ĥ. A shortcut key to access that tools icon would be great.ģ. However, if you have two or more instances of Chrome running simultaneously, the only way you can close them all is with your mouse (click the Tools icon and choose Exit). ![]() Shortcut to Exit Google Chrome - Like all other Windows applications, Chrome supports the Alt+F4 keyboard shortcut to help you close the current Chrome window. Subscribing to RSS Feeds - If you are reading a blog inside Chrome and wish to subscribe to that blog inside Google Reader, you either have to install bookmarklets or need to manually copy-paste the URL into Google Reader. ![]() I am not talking about extensions or toolbars here, just the very simple stuff:ġ. Google Chrome has been around for more than a year with three majors releases but there are few very basic features that should have been there from day one but are still missing in Chrome. Interestingly, Google Chrome is the only Google product that shed the beta label just months after the first public release while, for comparison, Google Docs stayed in beta for 3 years and Gmail took 5 years to graduate from the Google Labs. This month, Google also launched a brand new version of the browser (Google Chrome 3) to celebrate the first birthday of their baby. Google Chrome is a beautiful web browser with some very innovative features.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |