Google Chrome Getting Faster, More Secure

Google has an interestingpost on its Chrome Blog today that highlights two new features that will be coming to its web browser soon: web page pre-loading and an improvement to its Safe Browsing technology. But you don't have to wait to get these features: If you sign up for the  Chrome Beta channel, you can get them today.

According to Google, the two big improvements in today's Beta release are:

Web page pre-loading. "Chrome will now start loading some web pages in the background, even before you’ve finished typing the URL in the omnibox," the post notes. "If the URL auto-completes to a site you're very likely to visit, Chrome will begin to prerender the page. Prerendering reduces the time between when you hit Enter and when you see you see your fully-loaded web page--in some cases, the web page appears instantly."

Safe Browsing improvements. Chrome's Safe Browsing feature already protected users against automated web attacks. But now it can examine downloaded executable files to determine whether they're malicious. "If a file you download is known to be bad, or is hosted on a website that hosts a relatively high percentage of malicious downloads, Chrome will warn you that the file appears to be malicious and that you should discard it," the post reads. "We're starting small with this initial Beta release, but we’ll be ramping up coverage for more and more malicious files in the coming months."

If you're not familiar with the various types of Chrome releases there are, you should be. There are a number of versions, as it turns out, but the big three, perhaps, are:

Chrome. This is of course the safe, public version of Chrome. This is the stable Chrome version, the one that most people normally use.

Chrome Canary. Want to live on the bleeding edge? This version of Chrome, which installs alongside other Chrome versions rather than replacing them, is updated far more frequently than other versions and does not undergo thorough testing. But it always includes the very latest feature.

Chrome Beta. This version of Chrome is one version ahead of the normal, public version. It provides an early peek at functionality that's coming soon.

(There's also a Dev channel, and I've been warned that the Beta version can be a bit slower than the stable one. I've not noticed that.)

Google recommends that users be cautious with even the Beta version since it "inherently comes with more bugs and kinks to work out." But I use it regularly in lieu of the stable version and have never had any issues. And I suspect anyone reading this blog could do the same.

Discuss this Article 3

Mustang17
on Jan 6, 2012
Not sure if preloading is a great idea on a mobile device, you will be using up your dowload quota on things you may not even look at. I assume you can switch off this feature if you feel the need to. Then again the ISPs could move forward (or is it backwards?) :o) and up our download quotas. With new technologies as described above it would make sense. The reason I bring it up is in my first month of my new Nokia I went from 200-300mb downloads a month previously to a whopping 1.9GB in the first month of new device. This included 2 weeks when I didnt have a phone as I had a faulty unit. Did I forget to switch something over?
K2NNJ
on Jan 6, 2012
I think Chrome is the best browser going forward. In 2nd place Firefox and IE9 in a distant third.
spivonious
on Jan 9, 2012
Chrome is my go-to browser on WinXP, but I prefer IE9 on Win7. It's not quite as fast, but the accelerators and pinning of pages to the taskbar trumps the speed advantage of Chrome. Hopefully IE10 can match the speed of Chrome. I have Firefox and Opera installed, but I only use them for testing my web sites.

Please or Register to post comments.

IT/Dev Connections

Las Vegas
September 30th - October 4th

Paul ThurottYou'll have the opportunity to experience:
• 120 Technical
Sessions
• Networking with Peers
• Expert Speakers


Come See Paul Thurrott & Mary Jo Foley in Person!

Register Now

Office 365 InfoCenter

Get the latest insight and info from Paul

Read Now!

What I Use