I've been using a spanking-new 2016 Chromebook full time for more than a month now. Here's a brief guide that covers the good, bad, and indifferent. Short answer: yes, it can replace your Windows 10 ...
Chrome is embarking on a crusade to crack down on websites that still aren't using encryption, and it starts with the latest version of the browser, Chrome 56. Chrome 56 is launching in January, and ...
Google's Chrome browser has supported stand-alone "apps" on Mac, Windows and Linux since about 2013, but they'll be going away before long. The company just announced that it will remove support for ...
2016 might be the year that HTTP finally dies. Chrome’s security team announced today that the browser will start marking websites that use insecure HTTP connections to transmit passwords and credit ...
A seismic shift occurred in the way the world browses the web in 2016: Google’s Chrome browser supplanted Microsoft’s Internet Explorer as the world market-share leader in desktop browsers. And that’s ...
Google is making a lot of India-focused announcements today, many of them centered around improving services’ functionality in areas where data connectivity is poor. Chrome and Google Play are getting ...
Chrome OS has become a low-key success story for Google in the last few years. Because they’re relatively cheap and easy to track and manage, Chromebooks has made inroads in businesses and educational ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. is The Verge’s executive editor. He has covered tech, policy, and online creators for over a decade. Google is ...
Associate Editor Nate Ralph is an aspiring wordsmith, covering mobile software and hardware for CNET Reviews. His hobbies include dismantling gadgets, waxing poetic about obscure ASCII games, and ...
In a show of hacker team spirit in August of last year, Parisa Tabriz ordered hoodies for the staff she leads at Google, a group devoted to the security of the company’s Chrome browser. The ...
At the start of 2016, Microsoft’s Internet Explorer was still the most commonly used browser on the Web; it finished 2015 being used by about 46 percent of Web users, with 32 percent preferring Chrome ...
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