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Microsoft Chrome Chromium

Microsoft's Collaboration On Google's Chromium Brings a New Feature To Chrome (mspoweruser.com) 95

Remember when Microsoft announced they'd be switching to Google's open source Chromium browser for developing their own Edge browser? At the time Google announced "We look forward to working with Microsoft and the web standards community to advance the open web, support user choice, and deliver great browsing experiences."

Now MSPoweruser reports Microsoft has indeed started collaborating on Chromium -- making suggestions like caret browsing and a native high-contrast mode -- and at least one of Microsoft's suggestions is already coming to Chrome. it looks like there is one feature that Chromium approved which will be making its way to Chrome soon. According to a new bug (via Techdows) filing on Chromium, Google is working on bringing text suggestions for hardware keyboard to Chrome soon. The feature will allow users to get suggestions as they type which is currently available on Windows 10 and on Microsoft Edge.

Google has just started working on the feature and has set the priority to 2 which suggests that the feature should be available sooner than later.

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Microsoft's Collaboration On Google's Chromium Brings a New Feature To Chrome

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  • Firefox, it is (Score:5, Insightful)

    by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Sunday March 31, 2019 @11:40AM (#58361408)
    It's Firefox for me, then. The last remaining browser that doesn't track and spy on me...?
    • You might as well get off the internet then. Even if your browser isn't tracking you, everyone else is.

    • I hear you. Somehow Microsoft and Google working together on a browser does not inspire confidence for me. Wonder if they have entered into a "data sharing" agreement (scary thought!)
    • As I've said multiple [slashdot.org] times [slashdot.org] before, Firefox's saving grace is that it is free software—software we're free to run, inspect, share, and modify. If you don't trust Firefox you can make it trustworthy by examining what it does, changing it to meet your needs, and share improved copies to help your community. These freedoms are a clear difference from proprietary (user-subjugating) software such as Microsoft's browsers, Google Chrome, Apple Safari, and Opera. These freedoms are why Firefox is the basis of

  • Everything you type will be (at least by default) sent to Microshaft or Scroogle so that their clown servers can generate "suggestions." Fuck that idea.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 31, 2019 @12:02PM (#58361504)

    FTA: For those who don’t know, Caret navigation basically means using a text cursor to move around a page. With Caret browsing, users will be able to add a cursor to any webpage and use keyboard shortcuts like Shift+Arrow Keys to select text without using the mouse. The feature is already available in Edge and can be activated using F7 key on the keyboard.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I didn't even know about this feature. Apparently, Firefox has it too. Same shortcut F7 to enable it.

  • by SirAstral ( 1349985 ) on Sunday March 31, 2019 @12:06PM (#58361520)

    I use them both interchangeably depending on my needs.

    Firefox with NoScript is my default, searching browser.
    I use Brave for a few other things when I get tired of dealing with the alphabet script soup I deal with on some websites and it had a built in AD block, tracker block, anti-phish, anti fingerprinting, and HTTPS anywhere stuff.

    Google Chrome is spyware and its not even a secret.

    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      NoScript for Firefox was castrated after XUL was dropped from Firefox. Current version is close to Chromium version when it comes to features, as limitations of the add-on models are almost identical. It is nothing like the XUL version of Firefox NoScript.

      Which is why in spite of the purported "official support" of Firefox team for NoScript's developer's effort to transition from XUL to Webextensions and long and well funded effort, he had to admit failure in the end.

  • by fibonacci8 ( 260615 ) on Sunday March 31, 2019 @12:33PM (#58361620)
    This is traditionally referred to as the "Extend" phase of Embrace, Extend, Extinguish.
    • by Gregg M ( 2076 )

      This is traditionally referred to as the "Extend" phase of Embrace, Extend, Extinguish.

      Yea.. but this time they're competing with someone who is as fast and as nimble as they are.

      Google will say

      "Hey! Thanks for the suggestion" it'll be in the next update for chrome.

    • Let's party like it's 1999.

    • by Halster ( 34667 )

      This is traditionally referred to as the "Extend" phase of Embrace, Extend, Extinguish.

      Thanks Grandpa. The 90's called.... they want their "Embrace, Extend, Extinguish" post back.

    • This is traditionally referred to as the "Extend" phase of Embrace, Extend, Extinguish.

      Well no, it isn't. That would require it to be a feature tying it specifically to some Microsoft product or platform. The "Extend" that you refer to is creating proprietary, non-portable extensions that don't work on other vendors' platforms.

  • Edge, also known as "the little browser that couldn't".

    It wouldn't load half the pages I tried, including Slashdot.

    It would load partway, hang, and then say it "encountered a problem" and would have to restart. Did that solve the problem? OF COURSE NOT.

    Fucking IE6 was better at loading pages than Edge.

  • by newbie_fantod ( 514871 ) on Sunday March 31, 2019 @02:07PM (#58361922)

    ...I mean it still hasn't got a decent key-logger.

  • by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Sunday March 31, 2019 @04:05PM (#58362450)

    >"We look forward to working with Microsoft and the web standards community to advance the open web, support user choice, and deliver great browsing experiences."

    Really? Standards? User choice? My translation this marketing speak is this:

    "We look forward to getting Microsoft to use our browser so we can better force whatever we want as web standards to advance our control over the web, reduce user choice, and deliver a great browser-supplier experience"

    If you want something actually based on open standards, is actually open source, is actually about user choice, is actually driven by the community (and performs well and runs on all platforms, too); well, at least there is still one choice left. Firefox.

  • That can get past more of the user installed ad blocking products.
    Two ad brands working together to push more ads onto users.
    More tracking.

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

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