At google chrome blog announced that version 15 is already in the channels Beta, which includes new improvements and a new look when we open a new tab.
Without wanting to go too deep into technical novelties, I must admit that the designers of Google Chrome they have had a brilliant and very interesting idea. If you look at the image, we will have the possibility to organize the Applications (I guess they are extensions) installed in The Navigator, The markers and Most visited sites. All this through a simple, simple and very clean interface, something in which Google has always stood out.
You can download the version for GNU / Linux we can use the links below:
Linux
32-bit Ubuntu / Debian
32-bit Fedora / OpenSUSE
64-bit Ubuntu / Debian
64-bit Fedora / Red Hat / OpenSUSE
Well, I have the chromium installed and I think that those functions had already been applied for a long time, is that where they test things before the chrome?
I have never quite understood who depends on the other. I have to nourish myself with that information.
It seems comfortable to me that they have put but the capture with the VI $ ta as it does not hit here with white glue ...
That is irrelevant to this Courage news. Unfortunately I cannot download the Linux version to test it and therefore I have to use the image they have posted on the Chrome blog. Of course those sons of f *** use Windows .. Hence that catch.
Don't they put it in the testing or unstable repositories? I have no idea how that works in Debian
In the Testing repositories, Chromium is pretty up to date, so I guess it will be in shortly.
Opera
The current version of Opera doesn't seem comfortable to me, anyway tell that to a free software purist, you'll see what happens
Well, I don't consider myself a Free Software purist, but I don't really like that Opera is not Free Software, not even Open Source… however, it earns my full respect.
Before I did not have a good opinion of this browser, but since I tried Opera Next, damn ... amazing how fast it is, the cache so aggressive it does, in short, it has earned my respect and is undoubtedly an excellent browser.
Someone who doesn't know how to read code shouldn't care, someone who knows yes because they can always correct some code if it's wrong
It happens that yes, there are few who can read and understand the code, but it gives enough confidence and security to know and think «this software is open source, and several people have already reviewed it and have said that it does not have backdoors or anything malicious " or not?
IF we get posh people can say that the code is perfect and then have more errors than the blue screen of death itself