Chrome, Firefox Experiment With Hidden URL Bars | PCWorld

Netbook and tablet users looking for more screen space to display content from their favorite websites are getting some help from a pair of popular Internet browsers.

Google and Mozilla are testing versions of the Chrome and Firefox browsers that hide the bar used to show the URL of websites you visit. The features are experimental and it’s unclear if they will become part of the mainstream. Web surfers who want to always know where they are may have security concerns.

Here’s a primer on how it works, as well as the pros and cons.

In the latest build of Chrome Canary, an early stage version aimed at developers, you can enable “Compact Navigation.” Once enabled, you can right-click on any tab and select “Hide the toolbar.” The URL will disappear. To see the address bar again, click on an open tab and the URL bar will appear underneath.

In Chrome Canary 13, just enter “about:flags” in the URL bar, select Compact Navigation and restart the browser. Ars Technica points out the feature only works in the Windows version of Canary, and it’s not currently supported on Mac OSX.

via Chrome, Firefox Experiment With Hidden URL Bars | PCWorld.

Which Countries Have the Safest Web Access? – PCWorld

Seven of the 10 safest countries in which to surf the Internet are in Africa, with Sierra Leone rated the safest, according to a study by the Internet security firm AVG.

Researchers compiled a list of virus and malware attacks by country picked up by AVG security software, with data from more than 127 million computers in 144 countries to determine incidence rates of such attacks. Sierra Leone’s average incident rate was one attack for every 692 Web surfers. The study was conducted the last week of July. (See also “Top Standalone Antivirus Software for 2010.”)

After Sierra Leone, Niger fared well with one in every 442 surfers likely to be attacked while online.

via Which Countries Have the Safest Web Access? – PCWorld.