Chrome: Difference between revisions
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Chrome Extension | Chrome Extension | ||
= Most popular extensions and posts = | |||
== 2014 == | |||
http://lifehacker.com/most-popular-chrome-extensions-and-posts-of-2014-1674273297 | |||
= Change color for better reading = | = Change color for better reading = | ||
== [https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/night-reading-mode/mhbfhbljmehldmmoeoeelnlafloiifmf Night reading mode] == | == [https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/night-reading-mode/mhbfhbljmehldmmoeoeelnlafloiifmf Night reading mode] == |
Revision as of 15:40, 23 December 2014
Chrome Extension
Most popular extensions and posts
2014
http://lifehacker.com/most-popular-chrome-extensions-and-posts-of-2014-1674273297
Change color for better reading
Night reading mode
The good thing about it is we can choose the default to be ON or OFF. Some other extensions like 'Care your eyes' does not have this option.
Change Colors
Similar to above
Deluminate
Similar to above.
Switch account
Profile Swapper
Read for us
SpeakIt!
Chrome OS + crouton
Like virtualization, chroots provide the guest OS with their own, segregated file system to run in, allowing applications to run in a different binary environment from the host OS. Unlike virtualization, you are not booting a second OS; instead, the guest OS is running using the Chromium OS system. The benefit to this is that there is zero speed penalty since everything is run natively, and you aren't wasting RAM to boot two OSes at the same time. The downside is that you must be running the correct chroot for your hardware, the software must be compatible with Chromium OS's kernel, and machine resources are inextricably tied between the host Chromium OS and the guest OS. What this means is that while the chroot cannot directly access files outside of its view, it can access all of your hardware devices, including the entire contents of memory.