Windows 10 S vs. Chrome OS
Windows 10 S offers a stripped-back version of Microsoft's desktop OS. We compare it to Chrome OS, Google's web-based equivalent.
Windows 10 S offers a stripped-back version of Microsoft's desktop OS. We compare it to Chrome OS, Google's web-based equivalent.
Google laid out a timeline to wind down Google Chrome Apps, starting in June of this year. Chrome extensions, however, will live on.
Google will continue to “fully support” Chrome on Windows 7 for a minimum of 18 months following the official end of support deadline from Microsoft.
Microsoft has revived a practice from the heydays of Internet Explorer, releasing tools to block the new all-Chromium Edge on Windows 10.
Microsoft's decision to adopt the Chromium open-source code to power its Edge browser could mean a sooner-than-expected end to support for Internet Explorer.
Through outright neglect, Microsoft handed over the fate of its web browser - and its ability to shape the online world - to rival Chrome.
The upcoming Chrome 70 will allow users to disable a controversial automatic sign-in that links log-ins of its services with the browser.
Google Chrome is executing a three-stage strategy to drive channel growth across A/NZ, centred around recruiting, enabling and engaging partners.
With 'Site Isolation' in use, the browser should be better protected from Spectra-like attacks designed to steal info such as log-on credentials
Redmond releases add-on for Chrome – dubbed 'Windows Defender Browser Protection' – effectively giving up a major asset in its own Edge browser.
Google in July will start inserting a 'not secure' label in the address bar of every website that uses HTTP connections between its servers and users.
Well, that didn’t take long. While Microsoft claims that Windows 10 S is now a Windows 10 “mode,” the truth is that it has floundered.
Sites will have to pay an ad coalition to evade a blockade by the world's most popular browser.
Synnex and AOPEN sign a new partnership in a bid to delve deeper into solutions based on the Internet of Things for embedded products.
When Chrome 64 is released in late January 2018, it will largely mark the end of auto-playing audio on websites.