In Pictures: Chrome on Android. The tour.
Desktop meets mobile, at least for this browser
Google's Chrome browser has catapulted in usage on the desktop, but has been MIA on Google's Android mobile platform. This week, Google began to remedy that omission, releasing a beta version of the Chrome browser for Android. The beta runs only on Android 4 "Ice Cream Sandwich" devices, of which there is only one on the market, the Samsung Galaxy Nexus, but dozens of devices should get Android 4 this spring.
So what's different about Chrome versus Android's current browser? For one, it loads pages faster. You can also see some minor cosmetic changes, such as the icon button for switching among open tabs and the color of the icon bar at top. As for the rest, let's find out.
Latest News
- South Africa disappointed it has to share with Australia
- SKA to be jointly hosted by Australia, New Zealand and South Africa
- Cisco takes its lumps, keeps developing video meeting tools
- Wall Street Beat: After Facebook fiasco, don't write off tech IPOs
- FCC ruling on 800MHz band a boon for Sprint
- Oracle NetBeans 7.2 supports the latest PHP, C++
- Quickbooks Online outage leaves some customers in sour mood
- Mayor of New Jersey town arrested on hacking and conspiracy charges
- A comparison of Telstra's 4G phones
- Coding contest shows how big data can improve health care
- Untethered jailbreak for iOS 5.1.1 available for download
- Preview: LG Optimus LTE2
- Windows 8 update: all the latest rumours, opinions and possibilities
- Unthethered jailbreak for iOS 5.1.1 available for download
- CSIRO develops hands-free technology for mining repairs

