Google jumps into ‘Do Not Track’ debate with Chrome add-on – Computerworld

A day after Mozilla said it was exploring a “Do Not Track” feature for Firefox, Google today announced a Chrome add-on that lets users opt out of tracking cookies that monitor their movement and behavior online.

One privacy expert called Google’s new extension a “marginal improvement,” but applauded the browser maker for jumping into the privacy discussion.

Chrome’s “Keep My Opt-Outs” add-on leverages the self-regulation efforts by the online advertising industry to let users permanently opt out of ad tracking from the companies that participate in various programs, including the Network Advertising Initiative, said Google in a blog post Monday morning.

Google made it clear that it sees its strategy as walking the line between privacy and keeping the Web — which largely relies on advertising — afloat.

via Google jumps into ‘Do Not Track’ debate with Chrome add-on – Computerworld.

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Google pays record bounty for Chrome bug – Computerworld

Google patched 16 vulnerabilities in Chrome on Thursday, and it paid one researcher a record $3,133 for reporting a single bug. The flaws fixed in Chrome 8.0.552.334 were in several components, including the browser’s support for extensions, its built-in PDF viewer, and the way it processes cascading style sheets (CSS).

Thirteen of the bugs were labeled as “high” threats, Google’s second-most-serious rating, and two were pegged “medium.” Only one was tagged as “critical,” the company’s highest threat rating.

As it always does, Google locked its bug tracking database to bar outsiders from reading the technical details of the just-patched vulnerabilities. The company usually opens access to a flaw later — sometimes within weeks, often only after months — to give users time to update before the information goes public.

Researcher Sergey Glazunov was credited with reporting the single critical vulnerability, described by Google as a “stale pointer in speech handling.” A “stale pointer” is a bug in an application’s memory allocation code.

via Google pays record bounty for Chrome bug – Computerworld.

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10 Ways to Get the Most Out of Technology – NYTimes.com

Your gadgets and computers, your software and sites — they are not working as well as they should. You need to make some tweaks.

But the tech industry has given you the impression that making adjustments is difficult and time-consuming. It is not.

And so below are 10 things to do to improve your technological life. They are easy and (mostly) free. Altogether, they should take about two hours; one involves calling your cable or phone company, so that figure is elastic. If you do them, those two hours will pay off handsomely in both increased free time and diminished anxiety and frustration. You can do it.

GET A SMARTPHONE Why: Because having immediate access to your e-mail, photos, calendars and address books, not to mention vast swaths of the Internet, makes life a little easier.

How: This does not have to be complicated. Upgrade your phone with your existing carrier; later, when you are an advanced beginner, you can start weighing the pluses and minuses of your carrier versus another. Using AT&T? Get a refurbished iPhone 3GS for $29. Verizon? Depending on what’s announced next week at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, get its version of the iPhone, or a refurbished Droid Incredible for $100. Sprint? Either the LG Optimus S or the Samsung Transform are decent Android phones that cost $50. T-Mobile users can get the free LG Optimus T.

STOP USING INTERNET EXPLORER Why: Because, while the latest version has some real improvements, Internet Explorer is large, bloated with features and an example of old-style Microsoft excess.

How: Switch to either Mozilla Firefox or Google Chrome. Both are first-rate, speedy browsers, and both are free. It remains a tight race between the two, but Chrome has had the lead lately in features and performance. Both browsers include useful things like bookmark syncing. That means that your bookmarks folder will be the same on every computer using Chrome or Firefox, and will update if you change anything.

via 10 Ways to Get the Most Out of Technology – NYTimes.com.

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Why Google’s Chrome notebook will succeed – Technology & science – Innovation – msnbc.com

At this moment, our computers are capable of way more than we need them to be. Photos, e-mail, Web, music, a little video. We shame our powerhouse machines with this wimpy activity. It’s like driving a Ferrari to the corner store and back. So Google decided to build a Beetle. And it’s going to be huge.

In the past two weeks, Google has started sending out its pilot notebook for testing. Dubbed Cr-48 — a reference to its Chrome operating system — it is little more than a Web browser tucked inside a netbook. Yes, all it does is surf the Web. The device is actually a temporary stand-in. Actual Chrome OS notebooks from Acer and Samsung won’t be hitting the market until the middle of this year, once the kinks are ironed out.

I’ve been using the Cr-48 for about a week, and I like it more than I thought possible. Its body is a rubberized matte black with no markings — none whatsoever — and its 12-inch screen and full-size keyboard make it feel like a real live laptop. Open it up, log in with your Gmail account, and up comes the browser. “Apps,” basically glorified Web links, and all the system settings live inside that tabbed interface. There is no desktop.

I could tell you all the ins and outs of using it, but you can essentially already try it yourself. Just download Google’s Chrome browser, and then head over to the Web app store and you will get pretty much the entire Chrome experience. Even the Cr-48′s video chat, via Google Talk, can be duplicated inside a Chrome browser running on pretty much any webcam-equipped notebook.

Though the device feels quite nice, with some cute aesthetic tweaks such as the Search button that doubles as a new tab button, there is a lot of unfinished business, hence the delayed start. Google admits that though there’s a USB port and an SD card reader, they don’t quite serve a purpose yet. Printing via Google’s Web Print is still a beta affair. And its not clear what would become of all of the files you’ve already accumulated in your life — the photos, music and movies — if you were to make a full transition to the cloud notebook.

via Why Google’s Chrome notebook will succeed – Technology & science – Innovation – msnbc.com.

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Google Chrome OS Netbook Set for Dec. 7 Unveiling – Desktops and Notebooks – News & Reviews

Google will unveil a Chrome OS netbook Dec. 7. Key questions include: when can the public get them, and will the iPad and Android machines allow them to prosper?

Google is hosting an event Dec. 7 where it will likely demonstrate a netbook based on its long-awaited Chrome operating system.

Chrome OS is Google’s support platform for its increasingly popular Chrome Web browser, which accounts for 9.27 percent of browser use, according to Net Applications.

Google intends the platform to run on netbooks and other machines with keyboards, booting up in seconds as an alternative to computers based on Microsoft Windows, Apple Mac OS and Linux.

Google late Dec. 3 e-mailed eWEEK a media invitation to a Chrome-related event, stating simply: "On Dec. 7, we will host an event in San Francisco where we plan to share some exciting news about Chrome."

Engadget and other tech blogs said that this event will feature Chrome OS on a Google-branded netbook, and possibly the formal launch of the Chrome Web Store, which will provide an outlet for programmers to showcase and sell Web applications for the platform.

via Google Chrome OS Netbook Set for Dec. 7 Unveiling – Desktops and Notebooks – News & Reviews.

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Google Patches Security Holes in Chrome Browser – PCWorld Business Center

Google on Thursday released a new version of its Chrome browser that patches nine security vulnerabilities, including two critical threats.

Version 5.0.375.127, available for Windows, Mac, and Linux PCs, comes roughly three weeks after a security patch that fixed five Chrome flaws. Google usually updates Chrome every 2 to 4 weeks.

Software vulnerability tracker Secunia rates the latest Chrome update as “highly critical,” its second-highest ranking after “extremely critical.”

via Google Patches Security Holes in Chrome Browser – PCWorld Business Center.

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10 Add-Ons You Have to Know About For Google Chrome

A lot can be said about Google Chrome. And most of it should come as no surprise to you, the die-hard PC user that likely has more browsers installed within your operating system than games on your hard drive.

That’s not intended to be a disparaging statement; it’s celebratory. You’re a geek. You want to get the best browsing experience possible, which often involves jumping from browser to browser depending on what extensions or add-ons you like using, how you like pages rendered, and other miscellaneous-yet important-facets of the many available browsers you can choose from.

Well, a lot has changed since Chrome’s debut in late 2008. The gap between Mozilla’s extension library and Google’s has narrowed considerably. In fact, you can pretty much replicate an identical experience in each browser-for the most part, you’ll find extensions to fit just about anything you want to do.

But that certainly doesn’t help you when you get to the brass tacks of it all: Which extensions should you use? On a new installation of Chrome, what’s the top-ten list of items you need to download before you run your first Google search; read your first Maximum PC article; chuckle at your first lolcat?

via 10 Add-Ons You Have to Know About For Google Chrome.

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Google Chrome 5 Beta: The Top Five Features – PCWorld

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Google recently launched the beta version of Google Chrome 5 , the next iteration of the search giant’s Web browser. New features include HTML 5 specifications like Geolocation and file drag-and-drop; expanded cloud sync capabilities; Flash integration; and JavaScript engine speed boosts.

via Google Chrome 5 Beta: The Top Five Features – PCWorld.

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Apple, Mozilla chase Google with browser stability moves – Computerworld

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Apple and Mozilla last week took a page from Google to beef up the stability of their respective browsers, Safari and Firefox.

Apple’s move may also result in a faster future Safari that’s able to use the multiple cores in most modern machines’ processors, an analyst said.

Last Thursday, Apple developer Anders Carlsson announced WebKit2, an API (application programming interface) layer for Apple’s version of the open-source WebKit browser engine. Carlsson, who works on Safari at Apple, also contributes to WebKit, the engine that powers Safari and Google’s Chrome.

“WebKit2 is designed from the ground up to support a split process model, where the Web content (JavaScript, HTML, layout, etc.) lives in a separate process,” Carlsson explained in a message on a WebKit mailing list. “This model is similar to what Google Chrome offers, with the major difference being that we have built the process split model directly into the framework, allowing other clients to use it.”

Google pioneered process separation when it debuted Chrome in September 2008. Chrome, for example, uses a separate process for each tab, a practice that helps the browser survive crashes by a plug-in running in one tab or the failure of a Web application in another. Such compartmentalization adds overhead, primarily in memory use — each tab is essentially another iteration of the browser — but can dramatically enhance stability.

via Apple, Mozilla chase Google with browser stability moves – Computerworld.

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