Chrome Blog
The latest news from the Google Chrome team
Tip: Recovering closed tabs
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
If you've ever accidentally closed a tab with something important in it, or shut down the browser only to realize you needed one more bit of information about the webpage you were reading, despair not. Google Chrome remembers the last ten tabs or windows you've closed, and lets you restore them. You can get at these in several ways:
On the bottom of New Tab page, the most recent few are listed in the "Recently closed" section. You can even use this after restarting the browser, in case you accidentally quit with something important open.
If you right-click in the tabstrip, you'll see an option to "Reopen closed tab" or "Reopen closed window", depending on what you last closed. Using this repeatedly goes back through the remembered tabs and windows, from most to least recent.
If keyboard shortcuts suit you more than context menus, just use ctrl-shift-T to reopen a close tab or window.
Posted by Peter Kasting, Software Engineer
A new beta of Google Chrome for Mac - with extensions and more
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Since we released Chrome for Mac
in beta last December
, we've been busy adding new features. Today, after some incubation in the
developer channel
, we're happy to make some of these features more widely available. The new
beta release
of Chrome for Mac offers extensions, bookmark sync, and more.
With this new version, you'll be able to install any of over 2,200 extensions (and counting!) currently available in Chrome's
extensions gallery
. Extensions can add
useful
,
informative
,
fun
, or
quirky
functionality to the browser. You can manage your extensions by clicking on the Window menu and choosing "Extensions."
For this release, we remained focused on providing a snappy, safe, and simple browsing experience on the Mac. If you haven't tried Chrome on the Mac yet and are curious about its features, this video will take you on a brief tour:
Those of you who use several computers will now be able to keep your bookmarks synchronized between them. If some of your computers aren't Macs, don't worry: bookmark sync works in Chrome for Linux and Windows too. We also added bookmark and cookie managers in a way that feels completely at home on the Mac. For technically-oriented users, our new Task Manager will help you keep tabs on all of your tabs.
If you're not using Chrome yet, you can try all of these new features out by downloading the
Google Chrome Beta for Mac
. Existing Chrome users should be automatically updated to the new beta within the next day – just check the About window and look for version 5.0.307. We hope you're as excited about this new version as our animated friends are:
Posted by Mark Mentovai, Software Engineer, Google Chrome
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