The Future Of Chrome: Synced Tabs, Profiles, Native Client, etc. | TechCrunch

He elaborated a bit to say that one of these features is internally called “Profiles”. This feature (which you can already see hints of in builds of Chromium) allows users to have different Chrome features enabled on the same machine based on which Google account they’re logged into.

This means that you’ll be able to have multiple Chrome windows opened side-by-side on the same machine that can have different themes, extensions, etc. All of this personalization will be siloed in that one browser window.

Another feature that team members were excited about was the syncing of tabs. They’re still figuring out exactly how this should work, but the idea is a welcomed one. Essentially, you’ll be able to have a bunch of tabs open on one machine and quickly open those on another as well.

Other features comes soon include GPU acceleration, syncing data from within extensions, and a new tab page.

Exciting stuff. I really don't understand how anyone can use another browser at this point.

Chrome Wins Again: Now Clears Flash Cookies Natively

Google has maintained since they started bundling Flash that it was mainly to ensure they could make it more secure for their Chrome users. They do this by both sandboxing it and auto-updating it when the security patches regularly appear. But a new feature has just hit the Chrome dev builds which also now allows users to easily clear Flash cookies from within the browser.

Normally, when Flash is run as a standalone plug-in (as it is with all other browsers), users have to visit an Adobe website to clear Flash Local Shared Objects (LSOs). In other words, almost no one ever did that. Worse, the vast majority of users probably didn’t realize you even could do this — or that you perhaps should.

The newest builds of Chrome now bring this Flash cookie clearing right within the browser settings. In the “Clear Browsing Data” menu area (found at Wrench > Tools > Clear browsing data) you’ll now see the option to “Delete cookies and other site and plug-in data”. Selecting this will include Flash cookies.

Google Chrome Dev Tools: a.k.a Firefox is Dead

Chrome is so incredibly superior that when I see power users (nay, anyone) using Firefox at this point I have to resist the urge to climb up on something high and drop an elbow on them.

If you're not a power user and you don't care...use IE8. It's not bad.

If you care about your browser, use Chrome. It's what Firefox was supposed to be. gg, Firefox. ::