Google Chrome Settings
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his design will enable you to run a Linux Live USB from USB-associated drives or from the establishment DVD of a working framework.
The begin need demonstrates the request in which the boot loader investigates the associated drives for a working framework. When in doubt, the primary spot you will hunt will be on the inside hard drive of your PC and will stack the working framework that you have introduced on it.
You can set up that, before looking through the inside hard plate, it ought to be in the circle drive or in a USB drive.
Change Google Chrome Settings
The navigational tools on the internet are various. You have a wide choice of browsers. In the following video, this is the Google Chrome browser. It is explained that you have the possibility to modify certain parameters of this navigator. For this, Elisabeth de Fay (www.elisanet.fr) accompanies you in the steps of this modification. It also explains the usefulness of these menus and tools. For more information, see the following video.
Appearances You also have the option to customize Google Chrome by changing its background and themes. In this way, you can change the background images of your browser. Thus, you do the same manipulations as in the first step. Unlike the first, when you
come to the settings window, you choose "Appearances". After that, click on "choose other themes" and choose the one that suits you. When you have found your wallpaper, you just have to click on the "Add" button.
Security The last feature of Google Chrome is to change security settings especially passwords and privacy. For this, see at the bottom of the page a link where is written "Show Advanced Settings". While scrolling the list, you will see a title "Password and Forms". Depending on your preferences, check or uncheck the menus to save or not your passwords on the web.
Opening Pages To make these changes, you must first have a Google account. After that, you can customize your browser. Thus, Google Chrome can open on a fixed page. This saves you from having to always type the address of the site you visit most. The page can be then that of your mail or your favorite social network. You can then save three pages of openings. To do this, you must click on the small key at the top right of the window and then on the "Settings" menu. When the window opens, you will see at the bottom of the "On startup" menu the function "Open a specific page or set of pages". Click on this menu and specify up to three pages that you prefer and finish by clicking "OK".
If you Want to Change advanced Settings click on "Advanced Setting" option as given below.
2 hidden settings to make Chrome for Android even better
Google's Chrome for
Android provides a commendable browsing experience out of the box -- but if you
know where to look, you can unlock extra features that'll make it even more
effective.
Your mobile browser is
your gateway to the web, after all -- and whether you're doing important
work-related research or, ahem, important work-related procrastination, you
want to be as efficient as possible. These four settings are all about
enhancing your productivity and eliminating annoyances that slow you down.
So what are you waiting
for? Let's do this:
1. Give your address bar a time-saving trick
You probably already
know you can use Chrome for Android's address bar to get instant answers on all
sorts of things, ranging from equations to general knowledge. (If you didn't already
know that, try it out: Type "34*67" or "What is the capital of
Canada" into the bar at the top of your browser. The answers will appear
immediately, and you'll never even have to hit enter.)
Chrome offers another
useful address-bar trick for Android users, though -- one that is currently
under development and thus requires a little digging to uncover.
And if you're anything
like me, it'll prove to be an incredibly handy shortcut. You know all those
times you copy a URL from somewhere and then have to go paste it into your
browser? With this option enabled, anytime there's a web address in your
system's clipboard, Chrome will automatically present it to you as a one-touch
option the second the address bar comes into focus.
To activate the feature, you'll first need to be
using the Chrome
Beta version of the app. It's a separate download
that gives you access to cutting-edge features before they hit the main release.
Got it? Good. Now, open up the app and type
"chrome://flags" into the address bar. Tap the three-dot menu icon in
the upper-right corner of the screen, select "Find in page," and then
type "clipboard" into the box that appears. That should take you
immediately to an item on the page called "Omni box clipboard URL
suggestions."
Tap
the selection box below that item -- which should say "Default" to
start -- and change it to "Enabled." Chrome will now prompt you to
restart the browser in order to apply the changes.
And
that's it! Copy a URL from anywhere on your phone, head over to Chrome, and
watch the magic happen.
(As
a general disclaimer, I should note that Chrome's flags section is intended
only for expert users. It contains some items that could potentially cause the
app to become unstable. In other words: If you see something there that you
don't fully understand, don't mess with it.
2. Make the mobile web easier on the eyes
Look,
I'm not gonna point any fingers (cough, cough), but reading on a mobile device
isn't always the most pleasant experience. You've got overly cluttered pages,
inconsistent fonts, and all sorts of environments that are anything but optimal
for concentration.
The
next time you encounter a page that's paining your pupils, try out Chrome's
hidden tool for cleaning up the web. It's called Reader Mode, and it's been
quietly under development for quite a while now.
If
you've ever used a read-it-later app like Pocket, you'll be familiar with
Reader Mode's M.O. The feature strips out any superfluous elements --
everything from buttons and bars to related-links boxes and even (sometimes,
though not always) ads -- and gives an article a standardized style of
formatting. The result is something that's often significantly easier on the
eyes, if a bit more generic in appearance.
To activate the option, type "chrome://flags" into your
browser's address bar once more. (This one will work with both the Chrome Beta
app and the regular Chrome app, so take your pick.) Tap the three-dot menu icon
in the upper-right corner of the screen, select "Find in page," and
then type "reader" into the box that appears.
See
the item labeled "Reader Mode triggering"? Tap the selection box
beneath it and try setting it to "With article structured markup."
You can play around with the other settings, too, if you're so inclined -- but
that's the one I've found to work most reliably without being overly
aggressive.
Follow
the prompt to restart Chrome, and the next time you're viewing a compatible
article, you'll see a command to fire up Reader Mode at the bottom of your
screen.
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