Frankly, I cannot imagine a post-Firefox browser that does not have the capability to run add-ons or extensions.
Wired magazine has the lowdown on how Google Chrome came to be. Titled “Inside Chrome: The Secret Project to Crush IE and Remake the Web,” the story offers an inside view of Chrome’s genesis and why Google has just re-ignited the browser wars.
All in all, Chrome is a very promising browser. The key to its success, I think, is the availability of plugins and add-ons that would extend its functionality. (Chrome was released only today so there aren’t any plugins or add-ons yet.) Google Chrome should give Firefox and IE a run for their money.
I’m a long-time Windows user and I usually upgrade to its newest version. But when Microsoft launched Vista last year, I resisted the urge to change the Windows XP operating that’s running my laptop. Two reasons.
If you have multiple email accounts, checking them individually can be a drag. Fortunately, since I started using mainly Gmail, Google’s free web-based email service, I could forward all my, uh, forwardable emails — most of them from other Gmail accounts — to my main Gmail email and check all of them in one account.
But [...]
Javascript, the scripting language, makes website much more helpful, interactive and interesting. Many websites don’t function well without it. But Javascript can also be dangerous.
Bonifacio Day Marked with Anti-Cha-cha Protest
Dancing the Cha-Cha over Money
Fisher Folk Battle Huge Mining Proposal and Its Defenders
On the November Elections and the Next Steps in Building the Anti-Imperialist Movement in the U.S.
3 of Tagaytay 5 File Damage Claims vs Police, Navy
Duterte-Nograles tiff over park prelude to 2010?
Urban poor group hits Arroyo on housing mega-sale
Military operations in ComVal is linked to mining – environmental alliance
San Isidro town govt to penalize cacao felling
Boston villagers recount tales of military abuses
Philippine Airlines Cancels Bangkok Flights Due to Political Tension
Selling People Overseas to Save the Economy At Home
Arroyo Survives as House Allies Junk New Impeachment Case
‘No Election’ Plot Revived; Arroyo Vows to Veto It
In Major Rebuke, UN Faults Philippines for Killings
Worsening Storm for Philippine Economy?
Smart to Junk Thousands of E-Load Dealers?
With Guns Blazing, de Venecia Testifies, Links Arroyo to ZTE Bribery Scandal
As US Economy Tanks, Philippines Gets Set for Downturn
Philippine Airlines Reports P5.7-Billion Loss in 6 Months
Davao Villagers Battle World’s Largest Mining Company PRESS FREEDOM By Carlos H. Conde | A Right of Reply law will undermine the Bill of Rights. It will intimidate journalists and prevent them from performing their watchdog functions because the potential cost of doing their job is rather high – fine, imprisonment or closure.
Save the Refugees in the Eastern Congo
HUMAN RIGHTS By Fr. Shay Cullen | A stronger, better-armed UN force is urgently needed to protect the hundreds of thousands of innocent women and children and youth in the Eastern Congo. Five millions have died over the past several years and the world hardly noticed.
Politics, Philippine StylePOLITICS By Benjie Oliveros | What do the Senate coup, the fertilizer and Euro generals scams, and the continuing extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances, and filing of trumped up charges against activists have in common? These show the rottenness of politics in the Philippines.
Aspartame: Sweet, Sweet PoisonHEALTH | BUSINESS By Carlos H. Conde | What convinced me that aspartame is not safe are not just the studies that have found its link to cancer but also the efforts of Donald Rumsfield and the biotech giant Monsanto in ramming this product down our throats.
Caterwauling About Hillary ClintonPOLITICS By Ninotchka Rosca | Semantical analysis will show it’s all driven by fear of a strong intelligent woman. Will she take orders? Whose foreign policy will it be – hers or Obama? Will she be working for him or for her own political interests? Blah, blah, blah.