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Chrome 69 Arrives With Revamped Design, More Powerful Omnibox, and Better Password Manager (venturebeat.com) 60

An anonymous reader writes: Google today launched Chrome 69 for Windows, Mac, and Linux, Android, and iOS, just a few days after the browser's 10-year anniversary. The release includes a new design, more powerful omnibox, updated password manager, more accurate autofill, plenty of developer-specific changes, and a slew of security improvements. You can update to the latest version now using Chrome's built-in updater, download it directly from google.com/chrome, or grab it from Google Play and Apple's App Store. Further reading: As Chrome turns 10, Google bets on AI and AR, and Google wants to kill the URL.
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Chrome 69 Arrives With Revamped Design, More Powerful Omnibox, and Better Password Manager

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  • by TheFakeTimCook ( 4641057 ) on Tuesday September 04, 2018 @01:29PM (#57251900)

    You forgot THAT feature...

    • "... and Improved Spying! You forgot THAT feature..."

      A long time ago, I installed the Google Chrome browser. It installed 3 system services. I discovered that using the free SysInternals Process Explorer [microsoft.com]. Chrome back then took control over computers.

      Does Chrome still install 3 system services? Is Chrome spyware?

      I recommend Microsoft's SysInternals [microsoft.com]. There are numerous helpful programs written by one of the best programmers ever connected with Microsoft, Mark Russinovich [wikipedia.org]. (He is now CTO of Microsoft
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Chrome 69 (as did 68 and 67; I forget about earlier) on Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit installs the following "things" that would fall under the categorisation you're implying:

        - Two (2) Task Scheduler entries: GoogleUpdateTaskMachineCore and GoogleUpdateTaskMachineUA. The former gets run any time the user logs on, as well as at 18:28 every day (at least on my machine). The latter gets run at 18:28 every day, repeating every 1 hour for 1 day. The former runs C:\Program Files (x86)\Google Update\GoogleUpdate.ex

      • Both major third-party evergreen web browsers (Chrome and Firefox) install a service to download and apply security updates. If the current user were an administrator, the browser could use a service-free update flow, in which an update is installed after the user has closed the browser. But if the current user is not an administrator, and no administrator is immediately available to enter the elevation password, a service-free update cannot complete.

      • A long time ago, I installed the Google Chrome browser. It installed 3 system services. I discovered that using the free SysInternals Process Explorer [microsoft.com].

        Thanks for the advertisement. I discovered them using the task manager or the management console.

        Yes Chrome still installs services. If that is your definition of spyware then maybe go talk to the men in white coats and avoid any hard objects.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Keep hearing this claim but never see any evidence. Surely if it was true someone would have used packet capture to prove it by now.

      • >"Keep hearing this claim but never see any evidence. Surely if it was true someone would have used packet capture to prove it by now."

        If they are doing it "right" then perhaps it isn't that easy to know. So although one would think someone would notice something right now, perhaps not. One thing is certain- with a binary blob (like Chrome) it is hard to analyze beyond what it puts on the network.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        "-1 Troll how dare you question the prescribed narrative!"

        When you are offended by people asking for evidence that your religious dogma is true you have a problem.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Bad news for me, I have 110% custom scaling in Windows and after this update all text in Chrome is blurry. Yayyy.
  • by Artem S. Tashkinov ( 764309 ) on Tuesday September 04, 2018 @01:49PM (#57252082) Homepage
    Modern and shit except it's now painfully difficult to understand which tab is actually active.
  • to give google keywords I think are important so they can sell the information to others so they can bug me when I do not want to be hassled. No wonder I did not know what the original omnibox was.

    Just my 2 cents ;)
  • password manager? does giving a market data vacuum cleaner company your sites and log in credentials provide any real value to you. Reminds me of Facebook asking banks for access to their users banking information and accounts to make things easier for Facebook users!! Right!!

    Just my 2 cents ;)
  • On the day our beloved folk hero, Servalan (aka Jaqueline Pearce) died. The fact that she was notoriously sexy in her youth in no way relates to the version number.

    Seriously, a revamped design? You're infinitely better off with a modular design and a scripted UI. That way, you can upgrade modules independently and the design is whatever the user wants.

    Servalan, I think, would have approved.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    On this topic, check tflow's talk on 34c3:

    lecture: Uncovering British spies’ web of sockpuppet social media personas [events.ccc.de]

  • I go in to task manager and what do I see 10 chrome tasks running ok I am sure I can maybe hunt down a configuration setting telling chrome how many tasks they can start but why should I need to.
    Have not looked in to it but maybe they are preparing to open all links in a page in background browsers so they can appear fast?
    Did I ask for that do I care?

    Just my 2 cents ;)
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • And it no longer sucks. Twitter media don't show up, but who uses Twitter anyway.
  • Still no vertical tabs by the looks of it. I'll stick with Vivaldi as my daily driver I think.

Understanding is always the understanding of a smaller problem in relation to a bigger problem. -- P.D. Ouspensky

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