Google has officially released Chrome for the Apple and Linux operating systems, taking the software out of beta.
The new browser’s JavaScript performance has been greatly improved the company said, up 213 per cent and 305 per cent on the V8 and SunSpider benchmarks. The browser supports some HTML5 functions, such as Geolocation APIs, App Cache, web sockets, and file drag-and-drop.
New code will allow for synchronization of bookmarks and browser preferences across multiple computers and an improved extension manager that allows work to continue in incognito mode.
“We’re particularly excited to bring Chrome for Mac and Linux out of beta, and introduce Chrome’s first stable release for Mac and Linux users,” said Google in a blog posting.
“You can read more about the Mac and Linux stable releases on the Google Mac and Chromium blogs respectively.”
Support for Adobe’s Flash 10.1 is currently being finalized with the browser, and will be delivered automatically shortly the company said.
Chrome has seen a steadily increasing market share since launch and it is now the third most popular browser on the internet.
Google releases Chrome for Mac and Linux
By
Iain Thomson
on May 26, 2010 8:50AM
The ups & downs of the Google channel
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Partner Content
Channel faces AI-fuelled risk as partners lag on data resilience, Dicker Data summit told
The Compliance Dilemma for Technology Partners: Risk, Revenue, and Reputation
Tech Data: Driving partner success in a digital-first economy
Promoted Content
From Insight to Opportunity: How SMB Service Demand is Shaping the Next Growth Wave for Partners
Tech Buying Budgets for SMBs on the Rise




