Google Chrome run natively (most of it, anyway)

April 7, 2009 by admin · Comment
Filed under: Apple News 

Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Odds and ends, Freeware, Open Source, Developer

d6d43_googlechromenative Google Chrome run natively (most of it, anyway)

After much lamenting and a few attempts, Google Chrome can finally be run natively in OS X. Kind of. Don’t get us wrong, it works: it starts up fast and runs one process per window, just like the Windows version. But there are a few glaring holes, the lack of plugins (and therefore Flash, which means no YouTube) being one of them. The History, Bookmarks Bar, and Preferences screens don’t work either, which makes this not much more than a proof-of-concept still: it can run natively, but you wouldn’t really want to.

It’s too bad Google hasn’t gotten this working themselves sooner. Maybe they’ve just been too busy lately taking care of panda-obsessed AIs.

TUAWGoogle Chrome run natively (most of it, anyway) originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 07 Apr 2009 07:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Chrome features are coming to WebKit

September 9, 2008 by admin · Comment
Filed under: Apple News 

Filed under: Internet Tools, Developer

55cbf_webkiticon Chrome features are coming to WebKitAlthough Google’s Chrome browser is currently only available to Windows users (unless you are running an Intel-based Mac and VMWare Fusion or Parallels), its WebKit underpinnings mean that Safari, and other WebKit-based browsers, can benefit from Google’s code.

One of the larger innovations of Google Chrome, the V8 JavaScript engine, is incredibly fast. The WebKit project has its own new JavaScript engine, SquirrelFish, used in Mobile Safari and the WebKit nightlies. Still, the code base for V8 along with the Skia graphics library are making their way into the main WebKit repository. The Skia graphics library may already be in some of the newest nightly builds.

What does this mean for Mac and Safari users? Superficially, it might mean very little for right now, however, the Safari team can choose to implement any of the Chrome features that have been added back to the repository. That’s the beauty of open source.

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 Chrome features are coming to WebKit

 Chrome features are coming to WebKit

 Chrome features are coming to WebKit  Chrome features are coming to WebKit

 Chrome features are coming to WebKit Read more

Chrome features are coming to WebKit

September 9, 2008 by admin · Comment
Filed under: Apple News 

Filed under: Internet Tools, Developer

cb0e9_webkiticon Chrome features are coming to WebKitAlthough Google’s Chrome browser is currently only available to Windows users (unless you are running an Intel-based Mac and VMWare Fusion or Parallels), its WebKit underpinnings mean that Safari, and other WebKit-based browsers, can benefit from Google’s code.

One of the larger innovations of Google Chrome, the V8 JavaScript engine, is incredibly fast. The WebKit project has its own new JavaScript engine, SquirrelFish, used in Mobile Safari and the WebKit nightlies. Still, the code base for V8 along with the Skia graphics library are making their way into the main WebKit repository. The Skia graphics library may already be in some of the newest nightly builds.

What does this mean for Mac and Safari users? Superficially, it might mean very little for right now, however, the Safari team can choose to implement any of the Chrome features that have been added back to the repository. That’s the beauty of open source.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

 Chrome features are coming to WebKit

 Chrome features are coming to WebKit

 Chrome features are coming to WebKit  Chrome features are coming to WebKit

 Chrome features are coming to WebKit Read more