Google finalises features for Chrome 6
By Barry Collins
Posted on 22 Jul 2010 at 07:40
Extension synchronisation and an even cleaner menu system are two of the new features Google will include in Chrome 6.
Version 6 of the browser - which was only launched in September 2008 - is already being distributed to members of the Google Chrome dev channel, although the changes made in each new version of Chrome are decidedly less significant than those of other browsers.
Enhancements to browser synchronisation are key among the changes in version 6. Chrome already allows users to synchronise bookmarks, preferences and themes across different computers. Chrome 6 will let users synchronise browser extensions and web history too, making the process of moving from one PC to another even easier.
Google is also making its already Spartan browser interface even cleaner, by consolidating the two tool and page buttons into one menu. It follows a similar move by Mozilla with Firefox 4, which brings all the menu setting under one 'Firefox' button.
The browser's performance should be enhanced by improvements to scalable vector graphics handling and background image resampling.
However, one feature that hasn't made the cut according to a report on CNet is Print Preview, which has been a staple of most of the other major browsers for some time.
Although Google originally intended to include this feature in version 6, it's now been bumped back to Chrome 7. Which probably means we can expect to see it before the end of the year, given Google's breakneck blast through the version numbers...
From around the web
I think they should change their version numbering strategy. 6 versions in under 2 years? They are all minor updates. It should be version 1.5
By TimoGunt on 22 Jul 2010 ![]()
I assume the rate of updates will slow once they pass version 8....
By Laurent on 22 Jul 2010 ![]()
Because it's still beta
Think of it as Chrome .6 instead. Really waiting for Chrome v1.0 :-)
By Lomskij on 22 Jul 2010 ![]()
Re: Version Numbers
It is just marketing. If your average Joe sees IE8 and Chrome 1.2 they will choose IE8 because it is clearly "newer" than Chrome 1.2. Even your non-techy knowns never to bother with version 1 of anything so, by rapidly working their way up through the version numbers they can get past a lot of market pre-conceptions.
By Bassey1976 on 22 Jul 2010 ![]()
Yeah you're not wrong Lomskij. I switched to Chrome a few months ago and the one massive pain is the number of plugins that crash on it. Silverlight and Flash are both hit and miss along with Java and Quicktime. Yet all these plugins work fine in Firefox and IE. Might have to switch back
By TimoGunt on 22 Jul 2010 ![]()
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