Google has published its plan to build into Chrome what is arguably its most requested feature: the ability to accept extensions that can customize how the open-source Web browser operates.
And guess what? Google’s dependence on advertising notwithstanding, one of the extension examples the company points to is the ability to block advertisements.
The Chrome extensions document, spotlighted Saturday by Google programmer Aaron Boodman, doesn’t include a timeline, but it does shed light on why the project is a priority for Chromium, the open-source project behind Chrome.
Google has to add extensions if their browser is going to be competitive.
The girl in the picture gave me a “Chrome Extension”.
Nah, it’s probably a wood extension.
All fapped out now.
I’d GOOGLE her… Although, I might yell out “YYAAAA!! HHOOO!! OOOO!! every so often…
Lift that shirt anymore and we will be able to OOGLE HER GOOGLIES !!!
She is not even half-naked but she is making a lot of guys breathe hard.
Everytime The Register published an article about the Asus EEE PC with the beach girl photo, there would be a stampede to at oggle her.
I don’t think anyone read the article… they just looked at the photo. Har!
#7 – hhopper
Hey, I read it. T&A pics are a dime a dozen, but an article about Chrome? THAT, I’m reading. I hate it that Chrome doesn’t support my “how-many-days-until-Bush-is-gone?” plugin, like Firefox.
And I learned a new word too: Cruft. Tech terms! Yeah man, that’s what tech blogging is all about!
# 7 hhopper said
I don’t think anyone read the article… they just looked at the photo. Har!
There’s an article?
J/P=?
They may allow ad blockers but if the add is done right the only way to block it is to block the web page.
Ooops! My bad didn’t mean to be off topic! I knew I was getting old.
From Wikipedia: