afuna: Cat under a blanket. Text: "Cats are just little people with Fur and Fangs" (Default)
afuna ([personal profile] afuna) wrote2010-04-17 02:21 pm
Entry tags:

Trying out Google Chrome

The last time I tried Google Chrome, I was unimpressed by the way it tried to do updates in the background without asking for permission, or any way to opt out. I didn't bother to dig into what it was doing, or why it was doing what it did at the time, just uninstalled.

Still... I'm in the mood to try out new things while setting up my netbook, and I hear that Chrome may be light and efficient enough to be a good choice. I checked out the Google Chrome download page, and it says that installing Google Chrome will add the google repository to my system, so it can automatically check for updates, with instructions to opt out if I don't want it.

Since it uses the package manager, I know I'll be notified if there are updates *but* I'll have control of when, or whether, to install the updates. Contrast that to before, when I could only sit back helplessly and watch as the daemon mounted the disk image, with no way to cancel if it was inconvenient, and no way to trace what it was actually doing. UGH.

Anyway, I'm feeling more comfortable with the idea of installing Chrome onto Linux/my netbook.


BTW, have you all met pollow yet? My laptop is Blanket (my blanket is named MacBook), my netbook is pollow (I hear it's like pillow, only better :-)), my harddrive is partitioned into Pillow and PILLOW-FAT, my phone has no name, my old FAT-32 1GB USB drive is MEOWSER, and my current thumbdrive is DATA-FU.

Yeah, I don't like all the caps either. Damn you, FAT-32 limitations *fistshake*.


ETA: Mac OSX hints just released a hint explaining how to prevent google chrome's updater from running *amused at the timing*
jens: (Default)

[personal profile] jens 2010-04-17 08:56 am (UTC)(link)
I switched to Google Chrome 2 months ago and after a short time of incorporation, I favor it over firefox. It needs much less memory, websites load faster and all the plugins I used before are also available for Google Chrome. In addition, the free space for websites is bigger since the toolbar on the top is missing...
snakeling: Statue of the Minoan Snake Goddess (Default)

[personal profile] snakeling 2010-04-17 09:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm using Chrome on the netbook, and I'm thinking about going back to Firefox.

The pluses:
- it's faster when you only have a handful of tabs open
- it has Adblock with a preloaded filter
- it uses very little real estate

Why I'm switching back anyway:
- the gmail manager addon can handle more than one account
- it's faster when you have a lot of tabs open (well... less slow)
- there are addons to optimise the real estate
oona: (Default)

[personal profile] oona 2010-04-19 10:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Which gmail manager do you recommend, please? I noticed there were several.
oona: (Default)

[personal profile] oona 2010-04-18 02:32 am (UTC)(link)
I've tried Chrome several times, and I am always unhappy with it and at home, I am disgusted with it. Perhaps now that there are addons for it, it might be better, but like you, I saw all the crap Google was doing without being asked, and I was forever disabling it, so NO. I dun go for that. Google owns enough of my soul already. :-p