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Tag: Chrome for iOS

  • Open Pages In Chrome For iOS Without Jailbreaking

    Last week Google released the much-anticipated iOS version of their popular Chrome browser. Though the Chrome for iOS is, by all accounts (including mine), a fantastic app, it suffers from the same problem that plagues every other third party browser in the App Store: it can’t be set as the default browser. Of course, that’s Apple’s fault, not Google’s, but it’s still frustrating. Though jailbreakers have options in the form of tweaks like BrowserChooser and Browser Changer, those who aren’t willing to jailbreak are stuck.

    Fortunately there appears to be another alternative. A simple javascript bookmark in Safari will allow you to open any page in Chrome. Though it doesn’t make Chrome your default browser, it does make it much easier to jump from Safari into Chrome when you open a link from an app, an SMS message, or an email.

    Installing the bookmark is ridiculously simple. All you have to do is bookmark a page – any page, it doesn’t matter which – then do a little editing of the bookmark’s properties. The first thing you want to change is the name. “Open in Chrome” seems the simplest choice, but if you want to name it something else you’re welcome to. Once you’ve edited the title, you just need to edit the address. Simply replace the address you bookmarked with the following javascript code: javascript:location.href=”googlechrome”+location.href.substring(4);

    It’s as simple as that. Now if you want to open a page in Chrome instead of Safari, all you have to do is pull up your bookmarks and tap “Open in Chrome” (or whatever you decided to call it) and you’re good do go.

  • Chrome For iOS: Hands-On With Google’s New Browser

    Chrome For iOS: Hands-On With Google’s New Browser

    Yesterday Google announced the much-anticipated iOS version of their popular Chrome browser. In just hours the universal app had rocketed to the top of the Top Free Apps list in the App Store and a jailbreak tweak had shown up in Cydia allowing users to make Chrome the default browser (something Apple prohibits).

    So, maybe you’re wondering what all the fuss is about? If so, then you’re in luck, because I’m about to show you exactly what all the fuss is about. The short version is this: all the features that make the desktop version of Chrome so great have made the jump to Chrome for iOS. What’s more, they’re bundled up in a really slick and easy-to-use interface.

    When you first open up Chrome for iOS, you’re prompted to enter your Google password. This signs you into all your Google services – Gmail, Google Docs, YouTube, etc. – on the browser. This also enables browser sync, giving you access to any tabs you have open in Chrome on any other device – desktop, iPad, Android device, whatever. After that you’re given a quick demo of how Chrome works. Once that’s done (or you’ve skipped it, which is an option), you’re prompted to put in your first URL and/or perform your first search:

    Google Chrome for iPhone

    Once you’ve got a few tabs open, the issue becomes switching between them. Fortunately, this is pretty easy. What’s more, the interface is actually kind of fun. There are two ways to switch between tabs. If you’ve only got a few tabs open and you know how far apart they are, you can just swipe back and forth (see the image on the left, below). You have to start swiping all the way at the edge of the screen (right or left), otherwise Chrome will think you’re trying to interact with a tab’s contents.

    The second way is to tap the little tabs box in the upper right corner of your screen (see the image on the right, below). Here you’ll see all your open tabs laid out like a deck of cards. All you have to do is flip through them until you find the one you’re looking for. You can also close tabs from this screen. Again, you have two options. The more mundane way is to tap the little X in the corner of the card. The other way is to simply swipe the tab to the right or left. It will be thrown off screen, closing it. The results are the same either way, of course, but swiping it is a little more fun.

    Google Chrome for iPhone

    As noted above, Chrome for iOS includes browser sync. Any tabs you have open on any other device running Chrome are automatically made available to you here. To access them, just tap the folder in the lower right corner of a blank new tab page:

    Google Chrome for iPhone

    As you can see, you can also access your bookmarks and recently closed pages from the same toolbar at the bottom of the screen. Your mobile bookmarks are kept in a separate folder from your desktop bookmarks.

    So much, then, for Chrome on the iPhone. What about on the iPad? Well, Chrome for iPad is a lot more like what you’re used to in Chrome for desktop. The iPad’s screen real estate is much more like what you’d find on a desktop or laptop computer, which means that Google didn’t have to worry about being quite so economical with their space. Your tabs are back at the top of the screen. If you get a bunch of them open at once, they’ll eventually spill off the side of the screen. You can swipe back and forth across the tab bar to get to the ones you can’t see.

    The new tab page looks a lot like what you see on the desktop version. It includes a list of your recently closed pages, as well as providing access to your bookmarks and the tabs you have open on other devices. Unlike the desktop version, there’s no access to the Chrome Web Store (yet?).

    Google Chrome for iPad

    To create a new tab, all you have to do is tap the menu button next to the omnibox. Doing so gives you a drop-down list of options, including accessing your bookmarks, creating a new tab, creating a new incognito tab (more on that in a minute), going to the app’s settings, and more.

    Google Chrome for iPad

    Switching between tabs works a little differently on the iPad than on the iPhone. For starters, the easiest way to do it is to simply tap the tab you want to go to in the tabs bar at the top of your screen, just like you would on the desktop version. If, however, that mundane approach doesn’t tickle your fancy, you can also swipe between tabs. With the iPad, though, nothing really moves. When you start swiping (again, all the way from the edge of the screen), the contents of all the tabs are grayed out and individual tabs are highlighted. Simply keep dragging your finger until the tab you want to see is highlighted, then stop.

    The omnibox works pretty much exactly the way you’re used to from the desktop version: you just start typing and it brings up a mix of URLs and search results it thinks you might be typing.

    Google Chrome for iPad

    Chrome for iOS also, of course, brings the notorious Incognito Mode to your iOS device. You can create a new incognito tab from the menu mentioned above. Chrome for iOS doesn’t mix your incognito tabs and your regular tabs. Instead it groups them together, allowing you to switch between the two by tapping the toggle in the upper right corner of the screen.

    Google Chrome for iPad

    So, then, that’s Chrome for iOS. If you’re a Chrome user on your desktop, you definitely ought to pick this up. Unfortunately, Apple doesn’t allow it to be set as the default browser. Fortunately, as previously mentioned, the Cydia tweak BrowserChooser lets you change iOS’s default browser.

    Chrome is a universal iOS app, which means that the same app will work on your iPad or your iPhone. It’s available now as a free download from the iOS App Store.

  • Chrome For iOS Tops The App Store Charts

    Chrome For iOS Tops The App Store Charts

    Well, that didn’t take long at all. Mere hours after hitting the App Store, Google’s brand new Chrome browser for iOS has shot to the top of the charts. The app is currently sitting in the #1 spot on the list of top 25 free iOS apps, and it doesn’t look like it will be going anywhere any time soon.

    Google announced Chrome for iOS yesterday during the second keynote of the Google I/O 2012 conference. Fans of Google’s popular desktop browser have been clamoring for a mobile version for quite some time. Android users got their wish earlier this year with a beta version of Chrome for Android. The iOS version hit the App Store a few hours after the keynote. The Android version in Google Play left beta around the same time.

    Google Chrome is a universal app, and it’s currently available in the iOS App Store for free. As of now it has 3698 ratings in the App Store, with a score of 4.5 out of 5 stars.

  • Jailbreak Tweak Lets You Make Chrome Your Default iOS Browser

    Yesterday we told you that Google had announced Google Chrome for iOS during their second Google I/O 2012 keynote. Many iPhone users – myself included – have been wanting an iOS version of Chrome since Google unveiled the Android version earlier this year. Fortunately, it is exactly as awesome as we had hoped it would be. Unfortunately, it suffers from the same problem that plagues every other third party browser in the App Store: Apple doesn’t allow iOS’s default browser to be changed. So as awesome as any browser is, you’re stuck still using Safari for a lot of things: links in emails, apps, text messages, and such will all still open in Safari.

    Unless you jailbreak your phone, that is. Scarcely had the dust settled from Google’s launch of Chrome for iOS when a new jailbreak tweak hit the Cydia store. BrowserChooser was created by Ryan Petrich, and has one simple purpose: to change your iPhone or iPad’s default browser. And, like many single-purpose apps, it does it very well. Using the tweak is ridiculously easy: once you install it, you simply go into the Settings app and find BrowserChooser, which will be on the first page along with your other jailbreak app and tweak settings. When you tap it, you’re taken to a list of all the supported browsers you have on your iOS device. I only have Chrome and Safari, but the tweak also supports Opera Mini, iCab Mobile, Dolphine Browser, and Atomic Browser (sorry, Yahoo Axis). All you have to do is tap “Google Chrome” on the list, and you’re done.

    BrowserChooser Google Chrome iOS

    There is one notable thing that BrowserChooser doesn’t do: it doesn’t change “Open In Safari” menu buttons. So if, say, you’re browsing reddit in Alien Blue and want to open a link in Chrome, you still have to tap “Open in Safari.” You’re just taken to Google Chrome instead.

    The only catch is that BrowserChooser isn’t in any of the default Cydia repositories. You have to add Petrich’s repository manually. That’s pretty simple, though. In Cydia, tap the “Manage” tab at the bottom of your screen, the “Sources” button. From there tap “Edit” in the top right corner, then “Add” in the top right. Then just put in the address for Petrich’s repo – rpetri.ch/repo – and you’re done. Cydia will refresh, then you search for BrowserChooser, and install it (it’s free, by the way).

    Of course, BrowserChooser isn’t the only jailbreak tweak that lets you change your default browser. Browser Changer has been around for quite some time, and supports a whole lot more browsers. Chrome, however, is not one of them, though that will probably change in the not-so-distant future. So if you’ve already got Browser Changer and love it, then you might as well stick with it for however long it takes for the developer to get Chrome support added. If, on the other hand, you want Chrome as your default browser now, then check out BrowserChooser.

  • Google I/O: Google Announces Chrome For iPhone, iPad

    Google has just announced that they are bringing their Google Chrome browser to Apple’s iOS devices. The app will be available for iPhone and iPad, and is expected to hit the App Store later today.

    Chrome for iOS brings many of the most popular features for Chrome’s desktop and Android versions to Apple’s iOS platform. Chrome includes the omnibox, which allows you to conduct web searches or enter URLs in the same box.

    While Chrome for iPad makes excellent use of the tablet’s screen real estate, the iPhone has to be a bit more conservative. Chrome for iPhone’s tabbed browsing experience mimics the pages format of Safari for iPhone. With Chrome, though, switching between tabs is a bit simpler. All you have to do is swipe from side to side to switch from one tab to the next.

    Chrome for iOS also includes incognito mode. A button in Chrome for iOS’s menu bar allows you to toggle back and forth between Incognito Mode and normal browsing.

    Perhaps most importantly, Chrome for iOS syncs across all your devices. That includes both your tabs and your login credentials. That means that you can start reading a news article or looking a restaurant’s menu on your computer – be it a Mac, PC, Chromebook, Android device, or all of the above – and pick it back up on your iPhone or iPad. You can select any open tab on any device running Chrome.

    Chrome for iOS, along with Google Drive for iOS, should be available in the iOS App Store later today. It’s likely to be a universal app, and should be free to download