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Welcome to the Exploding Garrmondo Weiner Interactive Swiss Army Penis. |
GFF is a community of gaming and music enthusiasts. We have a team of dedicated moderators, constant member-organized activities, and plenty of custom features, including our unique journal system. If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ or our GFWiki. You will have to register before you can post. Membership is completely free (and gets rid of the pesky advertisement unit underneath this message).
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Jesus Christ you're one of them
There's nowhere I can't reach. |
I tell Google everything. Looking through my Google web history is quite enlightening, as they capture all the webpages I look at - and not just sites reached through a search. Amazing that they know what sites I visit via bookmarks!
Also, props to Chrome for crashing far quicker than either Internet Explorer 7 or Firefox 3, when I direct it to cool2.php This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
Chocorific |
@Zergrinch: Why don't you just use your regular browser-integrated history for that? That one is totally local and not visible for anyone else without access to your system. I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
Google also said they will retroactively change their Chrome EULA, giving you even more reason to stfu and leave. Most amazing jew boots |
But anyhow, this browsing activity is information I cannot access across different computers, or for that matter, different browsers on the same computer. Hence Google. Besides, I don't consider what I browse as ultra top-secret information that must absolutely be safeguarded. If Google's employees want to know what I'm up to - out of several millions of other Google users, more power to them What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? |
So what are you, a bomber or a nonce? FELIPE NO |
That's the same broken argument you get from proponents of government sanctioned wiretapping. "If you haven't done anything wrong, you have nothing to fear." LiquidAcid's approach might be somewhat overkill (the time invested in it alone, I suppose), but nothing wrong with protecting one's privacy out of the principle that it just isn't anyone else's goddamn business.
What, you don't want my bikini-clad body? |
I probably haven't looked into it enough but I really don't like that the new tab shows your most viewed sites. I'd rather configure that to perhaps my favorite bookmarks or useful bookmarks. Let's just say I don't want to be at work and press ctrl-t and reveal to a coworker my browsing habits. That's pretty lame.
Also, the delete history doesn't work. That needs to be fixed. How ya doing, buddy? |
Also, since this is basically ripped off from Speed Dial on Opera, how come the numpad keyboard shortcuts don't work? Anyway, I already like this browser a lot better than Firefox, which I never really liked. There are small niggles (such as ctrl+i for italics not working anymore on GFF ) but the 90% decrease in memory usage alone is enough for me to switch. I accidentally clicked on "Open all bookmarks" and it took about half a second to do just that. I have hundreds if not thousands of bookmarks. That was awesome. There's nowhere I can't reach. |
It's funny how typing ":%" in the address bar is fatal to Chrome...
This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
lol yeah just did that too
Were you on /g/? =') I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
I've been using Chrome at work, and while I'm impressed with how it performs for general browsing, it doesn't seem to like the work-related web apps the EPA uses. For travel arrangements, we use GovTrip, which opens a new window just about every time you perform an action (yes, it's terrible). I can't log in, because when I click to accept the terms, it just opens a new window with the same box to accept the terms and won't proceed beyond that. We use a different program to track correspondence, and I've had several problems with that. Most importantly, the program uses some kind of java applet to open any Word, pdf, etc. that's filed, and Chrome just sits there on the opening screen, without actually launching the applet.
It's a shame, because I really like what I see with Chrome. My only other big gripe is that with IE/Firefox, I constantly used the dropdown menu in the URL box to go to recently visited sites, and I don't see an easy way to do that in Chrome. I was speaking idiomatically. |
Chocorific |
Not wanting this and protecting himself from it has nothing to do with paranoia, it's a (hard) lesson learned from the past. Some of you should really have a talk with people from East Germany who suffered greatly from the whole Stasi surveillance thing. That is nothing to laugh about...
Points 1) to 3) are a one time thing, I usually do this when installing a system. Point 4) (sry, it's not correctly labeled) is rarely used by me. But it's just a matter of starting an application and changing the proxy server in my browser, so it's really no rocket science. Using the university proxy isn't also very hard. I usually have a SSH connection to the main university server open (to have access to my files there and to some superior CPU power *g*). If that connection is up it's also only changing the browser proxy. Really simple, so nothing that takes minutes of setup. And everybody complaining about bugs in the beta: chromium - Google Code There is bugtracker hosted on the site, so if you encounter a bug look it up in the list and if you don't find it then post it. @Memory usage: Initial releases usually have a very low memory consumption, compared to other applications that do the same thing. That was the same for initial releases of the FF browser. Before jumping to any kind of conclusions most of you should wait for some final release and then track then memory usage with every following release. It's going to increase as well (same as FF), up to the point where everybody complains and a lot of code is rewritten to fix this issue (example: FF3). I really don't think it's going to stay this way. What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? |
A few issues I've come across:
1) There seems to be no real home page other than the "recently visited sites". If I'm browsing I can't simply click a home button which was a feature I really enjoyed in other browsers, especially at work. 2) No bookmark manager. 3) No click scroll wheel. ;___; I will be adding more as I go along but that's whats been irking me so far. How ya doing, buddy? |
While writing this post in Chrome, I've just discovered that the highlight color is white on dark blue. This makes it IMPOSSIBLE to see what you've highlighted on GFF. GJ, Google. Also how are people getting Chrome to use only 15MB of RAM? According to my Chrome task manager, each TAB uses 15MB on average, and the browser itself sits at 70MB. I've got 7 tabs open and I'm using 160MB. I'm not really complaining since that's still comparable to FF3, and according to Google the difference becomes more dramatic as you open more tabs, but I'm just curious how other people are getting these results. Most amazing jew boots |
The highlight thing is a pretty annoying oversight for sure. It's like Google didn't test Chrome on GFF, don't they know it's the most important site in the world There's nowhere I can't reach. |
Yeah, you're right. I hadn't seen that quite yet as I've only begun using it at work today and haven't had much time to rummage through the options yet. I still don't like how the tabs open up as recently visited sites. This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
No, that's not quite it... No, that's not it either... There's the money shot. Most amazing jew boots John Mayer just asked me, personally, through an assistant, to sing backup on his new CD. |
It's a work thing.
Tin foil hats don't work too well on bosses, after all. I was speaking idiomatically. |
You know, this little browser isn't too bad. However, I opened the task manager to see how much RAM it was using and I found that it always uses 2 processes even though I only have one window open. The one thing I did like about it though is that it only use about 15 MB for each of those instances. I also noticed that every tab I opened was creating a separate process and when said tab was closed, the process would end thus clearing that bit of RAM.
I don't know how they came up with that but, goddamnit, that's fucking genius. Where Firefox was clocking in a massive 275+ MB for me with my Gmail tab, my work email tab, GFF, stock.xchng and Digg open Chrome only clocked (an estimated) 120 MB. That's a huge fucking difference for me, guys. What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? |
You can grab the Chrome Nightly builds here if you want. I'm not exactly sure of the changelogs, but I'm hoping they're going to fix the carpetbomb thing. They've fixed the :% crashbug, at least.
Also, I like how you can drag Chrome's tabs around. You can reorder them, or even drag them out of the window and it'll automatically produce a new frame/window. I wish they'd add a few options to the browser, though. I miss middle-clicking links and automatically switching to a new tab. I'm also not too fond of the blue 'frame' they give you in XP. I like how the frame sort of 'adapts' to either XP or Vista, but I think it should still try to follow your current visual style. The blue just doesn't fit, really. [edit] Okay, checking out the latest build [1778], there's a 'Minor Tweaks' tab in the options. You can set it to 'Always ask where to download files'. I'm not sure if that'll be a fix for the carpetbomb, but it's a start. FELIPE NO |
What's this carpetbomb thing that you mention?
Also, Firefox 3 already gives the ability to drag tabs around, and to other Firefox windows. I suppose the ability to drag out to produce a new window entirely is an added innovation. What, you don't want my bikini-clad body? |
If I remember correctly, Firefox 2 allowed you to switch tabs around too. I could be wrong though. I also want to know about this "carpetbomb" crash bug or whatever that is.
EDIT: Is there any word on a Mac version of this? Most amazing jew boots
Last edited by Paco; Sep 5, 2008 at 11:25 AM.
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The 'carpetbomb' thing was a hole that was in the earlier builds of Safari, too. It's a WebKit thing, apparently. It basically allows a simple script to download and run [malicious or not] applications without you even knowing.
Also, I didn't actually know Firefox let you drag tabs around. I guess I never really tried it until I read that Chrome could do it. There's nowhere I can't reach. |
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