Speeddial 2 – an enhanced ‘New Tab’ page for Chrome Written by George B. Moga at 18:41 I prefer to keep the number of extension in my browsers as low as possible – speed is nice in any situation. Download microsoft 2018.

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Speed Dial is an add-on for the Mozilla Firefox browser that offers shortcuts to the web pages you visit most. Once installed it will allow you to see a mosaic of thumbnail images of these sites, adapting the aspect of each one of them. You can create as many groups as you need and move around them easily. A simple click on any of the thumbnails will take you directly to the page in question. Features of Speed Dial • Access from the icon on the toolbar, from the context menu or from the 'Tab' menu. • Open the mosaic in a new window or tab. • Configure the number of thumbnail images you need in each group and their size.

• Control the add-on by means of keyboard shortcuts. • Import or export your configuration to use it on other computers. A very good and useful add-on. Do you use Firefox? Access your favourite web pages in record time and with a simple and efficient system by downloading Speed Dial for free, the essential add-on for the Mozilla browser.

Safari, eat Google's dust -- its Web browser -- under its developmental title -- has hit version 4.0 on the, and our tests confirm it's the fastest browser in the world on both and now on Mac OS X. Version 4.0 for Mac adds features we tested and discussed when the beta landed on PCs: an even faster version of Google's V8 Javascript engine, themes to skin Chrome in pretty colours, and a customisable 'speed dial' homepage. But despite its 4.0 moniker and its impressive speed, Chrome for Mac is still riddled with bugs.

Big ones, like those spiders in, only even more hellacious. Performance improvements As we said the other day, speed is central to Chrome's manifesto. Web site developers more than ever rely on oodles of JavaScript technology to make their sites as responsive and functional as possible, so browsers need to be able to process and render it with constantly increasing efficiency.

When benchmarking Chrome 4.0's rendering speed on a PC last week, it obliterated its and scored 100/100 on the standards-compliancy tests. On the Mac, it only gets better. It completed the in just 657ms. Only 4 per cent faster than its PC brother, sure, but 34 per cent faster than Safari 4.0.3, which scored 886ms on the same 2.0GHz. Keeping things in some sort of context, Firefox version 3.5.2 on OS X scored 1,508ms and Opera 10 beta 3 scored 5,958ms.

Themes and homescreen As on PC, so on Mac. Chrome's are universally supported across each platform using a standard file format. They spice up the look and give Chrome the option for some extra OS X-suited gloss. The 'speed dial' homescreen -- the default screen when you open a new tab or window -- differs a little on the Mac, however. Within version 3.0 on the PC, the Web pages you most frequently visit are displayed as six thumbnail images and can be rearranged and 'pinned' to your heart's content. This is now a feature of Chrome on OS X.

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Below them on the PC version was a box of recently closed tabs and an adjacent box with nothing but the question, 'What will we put here?' This empty box doesn't exist in OS X, and the box of recently closed tabs is much smaller. Flash and bookmarks Chrome 4.0 has better support for Adobe Flash now (ironically, the of the browser on OS X didn't work with Flash, meaning Google's own YouTube was unsupported). Problem is, it's still criminally inefficient, resulting in poor frame rates, excessive CPU usage and choppy playback -- three issues not present in Safari or Firefox on OS X. But this new build provides slightly better bookmarking functionality. You can import bookmarks when installing Chrome on OS X for the first time -- this is a truly remarkable breakthrough -- but there's still no easy way to simply import an HTML file containing bookmarks exported from another browser.