Difference between revisions of "Google Chrome"

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NO SOLUTION.  Google communists control your web browsing experience and give you few options.
 
NO SOLUTION.  Google communists control your web browsing experience and give you few options.
  
 
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==Installation==
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===Linux Installation: Example for Ubuntu/Mint===
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{{:Chrome rather than Chromium}}
  
  

Revision as of 18:50, 21 October 2019

Google Chrome uses the Chromium engine, an open source web browser project. Google Chrome is more secure than Microsoft Internet Explorer. It loads and runs faster than both Internet Explorer and Mozilla Firefox. It is less secure than Firefox due to the fact that the NoScript security extension does not support Chrome. Specifically, Firefox + NoScript is more secure than Google Chrome. Furthermore, Google Chrome has been criticized along with all Google products for a lack of privacy. Google collects user data for their own company agenda which may include marketing and profiling.

Overall, it is recommend that individuals try using Google Chrome when a web site does not render or function correctly in Mozilla Firefox. It is also recommend using Google Chrome with Google web applications such as Gmail, Google Drive, and Google+. It is recommended using Google Chrome as an alternative to Microsoft Internet Explorer and where Mozilla Firefox cannot be used.

Google Chrome is one of the top three web browsers in use on Microsoft Windows desktop systems well into 2015. Marketshare is roughly ranked by the following:

  • Microsoft Internet Explorer (on the PC)
  • Mozilla Firefox (on the PC)
  • Google Chrome (on the PC)

In the mobile market browsers such as Apple Safari have entered the top three web browser category. With the success of the iPhone and other Apple mobile devices, Safari based browsers are ranked first in popularity by many pools.

Plugins and Extensions

Looking for the extensions area of Google Chrome browser? As of version 71.0xxxx here's some ways to find it:

  • Click the stupid hamburger (three vertical dots) menu -> More tools -> Extensions

or

  • In the address bar type: chrome://extensions/

Wanting to download extensions for Google Chrome? As of late 2019 the following URL gets you there:

The crackers at Google change this stuff at a moment's whim and in between spending thousands of man hours going through programming code not to fix bugs, but to change anything that might be politically incorrect about the syntax of the code, whatever that means, and censoring free speech online. (the term "man hours" is not politically correct.)

Flash Block Extension Not Necessary

Flashblock is not needed on Chrome - go to settings/advanced/content settings/plugins and select "click to play". Now flash will not run automatically. But you can decide to click on something and allow it to play if you want. Works great - no plugin needed.

Ghostery

Ghostery looks for third-party page elements (or "trackers") on the web pages you visit. These can be things like social network widgets, advertisements, invisible pixels used for tracking and analytics, and so on. Ghostery notifies you that these things are present, and which companies operate them. You can learn more about these companies, and if you wish, choose to block the trackers they operate.

Font Changer with Google Web Fonts

Font Changer with Google Web Fonts allows you to change the font on Facebook, Twitter, Google, Youtube or any other site. Test Google Web Fonts

See also: Sans serif fonts and I can't tell I from l when they look alike but not exactly like 1.

Font Finder

An easy-to-use font inspector to get CSS styles of the selected element.

Google Voice (by Google)

Make calls, send SMS, preview Inbox, and get notified of new messages. Although this can be accomplished on the Google Voice web page "voice.google.com" the functionality is buggy. Using Chrome, on the official site at voice.google.com it sometimes is not possible to place a call. The plugin allows the call to be placed by clicking an icon in the menu of the web browser as an alternative. It is a functional workaround for buggy crap Google software.

Annoyances

Nonstandard button size in upper right corner: In the thread: https://productforums.google.com/forum/#!topic/chrome/4W9ZNDwKeZo

they are blaming Windows XP. When using Linux, Mint, Cinnamon desktop the Chrome buttons are the wrong dimensions also. It is a Chrome problem, not a Windows XP or other desktop problem. It does cause problems, except on the Cinnamon desktop the chrome buttons are smaller and more squished. Chrome obviously doesn't call the common button widget of the OS desktop.

Unable to Escape pause animations: Hitting the escape key should freeze any animated GIFs on a web page and in Chrome it doesn't work.

Copy Without Formatting: Especially when trying to paste something into LibreOffice Writer there needs to be a way to copy just the text, without all of the formatting. Because of all the formatting and crap included with the copy from Chrome, LibreOffice Calc or Write wont do a "paste special" from Chrome sometimes.

Audio playing in a tab you're not using: or videos for that matter. The user should have more control over this.

No Support for 32-bit: Come on Google, there's still folks out there that deserve basic security updates for their 32-bit version of Chrome. And what's with that annoying message that pops up every time you open Chrome exclaiming "no longer supported." How about a "we get it" button so that it stops telling us.

Google monitors the Internet and forbids anyone from offering old versions of Chrome to download. Wow what control freaks! Google's the new Micro$oft, except worse. Right, it is important to run the latest for increased security, which is why it sucks they no longer provide updates to the 32-bit, however, there are times when an older version is needed. Also, it is next to impossible to disable the updater.

Chrome Advertisement blocking doesn't block Ads well: it uses the standards of the Coalition for Better Ads to decide what ads get blocked. If the ad follows a lose set of rules then you still get ads in your face. So now Google becomes the authority on what types of ads are acceptable and which ones go over the line, all when Google makes big $$$$ on advertising revenue.

Customize

In the URL bar type: chrome://flags/

Search From Address Bar

The address bar or url bar is for entering a web site address in the form of a Uniform Resource Locator address that via the magic of DNS resolves to the IP address of an Internet web server. It should not be used for a random text entry search, that is what specific search engine web sites for for. Why are we AOLizing the world wide web experience? Google Chrome was to blur the distinction between a URL and a search string. They suck.

  • An Omnibox is similar to the traditional web browser address bar, but you can also use it like a search engine.
  • Disable Omnibox, it causes confusion and redirects unwanted entry into a search such as an accidental malformed URL. ie: a URL typo is not a search term.

Google does not want you to disable this. Suggested settings in "flags" cannot be found. For example:

  • Enable search in omnibus - not found
  • Enable search button in Omnibox - not found

NO SOLUTION. Google communists control your web browsing experience and give you few options.

Installation

Linux Installation: Example for Ubuntu/Mint

Google Chrome is not FOSS. But it does stuff Chromium does not do. You can replace Chromium with Chrome, or have them both on the system. You do not have to choose one or the other because you can have them both.

Apparently in Mint 18.3 Chrome cannot be installed via the Mint Software manager. Instead we shall go to console and install it.

  • Create a text file in the path /etc/apt/sources.list.d
cd /etc/apt/sources.list.d
vi chrome.list
  • Add the following text to the newly created chrome.list file
deb [arch=amd64] http://dl.google.com/linux/chrome/deb/ stable main
  • Download the current signed key [ THIS METHOD IS OUTDATED AND DOES NOT WORK ON MINT 22.0 ]
wget -q -O - https://dl-ssl.google.com/linux/linux_signing_key.pub | apt-key add -
apt-get update
  • Install Google Chrome from the new repository
apt install google-chrome-stable

This procedure was verified in 2017 on Mint 18.3 Sylvia installed Google Chrome Version 63.0.3239.108 (Official Build) (64-bit)

***note:Although Ubuntu requires the repository be added manually as shown above, it is probably not necessary with Mint as this distribution allows non-FOSS. Try installing w/o adding the repo first.

***note:sudo can be used with the deb command, but cannot be used with wget to add the key (for some reason) so you may have to sudo bash then use wget to update key.

dearmor

Section addressing GPG error NO_PUBKEY. Linux Mint 22.00 and apt-key is fully deprecated as it no longer works at all. To work though the GPG horror show it is important to understand the two paths you need to add or modify files in, they are:

  1. /usr/share/keyrings/
  2. /etc/apt/sources.list.d/

You will need to sudo everything to do this. The first path is where the actual GPG key goes for Google Chrome (the software we are installing in this case). The second path is where you add the new software source.

Step #1 - Get that lousy asinine key you need since the devs think everyone is out to get you. execute:

sudo wget -qO- https://dl.google.com/linux/linux_signing_key.pub | gpg --dearmor | sudo tee /usr/share/keyrings/google-chrome.gpg > /dev/null

Critical: The "--dearmor" command line switch seems to make this work. Without that, the key is not readable by APT on Mint 22. Very the key file was created in /usr/share/keyrings/

ls -laF /usr/share/keyrings/

You will want to see the file "google-chrome.gpg" with 644 file permissions and a size of at least 12K or better (so we know it is not null).

Step #2 - Add the "Additional Repository" to software sources. You can use the Software Sources GUI or you can create an independent file for chrome, lets do the file method for this example

sudo vi /etc/apt/sources.list.d/google-chrome.list

add the following line of text which has the repository as well as the file path to the asinine key that we now have to cope with.

deb [arch=amd64 signed-by=/usr/share/keyrings/google-chrome.gpg] http://dl.google.com/linux/chrome/deb/ stable main

Now you should run

sudo apt update

note: It does not matter if you create the file "google-chrome.list" in /etc/apt/sources.list.d/ or if you add the line in "additional-repositories.list" as long as it includes the path to the signed key gpg file.

Enjoy this solution until the dev nerds decide to change it again and make it even more complicated!