14 Chrome tricks you didn't know about
Use Google Chrome as your daily browser? Here are some tricks that would come handy in making your user experience with Chrome more fun, productive and intuitive. Let's get started.
Use Omnibar as a calculator
You
can just type in the numbers you want to calculate, for example if you
want to multiply 5 by 10, just enter ‘5*10=’ you’ll see a dropdown where
the calculation is already made. Same can be used for various
conversions such as Pounds to Kilograms, currency conversions etc.
Get your bookmarks saved on cloud
While
shifting to a new computer, we always miss the comfort of the bookmarks
on the Chrome of the previous machine. Well, simply Sign in to Chrome
with your Gmail account, and voila! It saves your bookmarks, settings
and passwords if you’ve saved any on the cloud.
So if you just sign in to chrome using your Gmail account, all your settings would come directly on to Chrome, just as it was on your previous PC. This will also save bookmarks on the Chrome browser on your Android device if you’re using the same account.
So if you just sign in to chrome using your Gmail account, all your settings would come directly on to Chrome, just as it was on your previous PC. This will also save bookmarks on the Chrome browser on your Android device if you’re using the same account.
Pin websites to Desktop
If
you have a certain website that you use more often, you can pin the
same websites to your desktop as apps. To do this, simply head to the
website to be pinned, and go to Chrome Settings then More Tools and then
‘Add to desktop.’
Handy Chrome Shortcuts
Chrome
supports dozens of keyboard shortcuts, and these can be used to do
everything from managing/navigating tabs, to clearing browser history.
Here are some that you’ll end up using the most:
* Ctrl+Shift+N: Open a new window in Incognito mode; Ctrl +J: Open recent downloads; Shift+Esc: Open Google Chrome’s task manager; Alt+Enter: Open URL in a new tab after typing the URL manually; Ctrl/Shift+F5: Reload the current page while ignoring cached content.
* Ctrl+Shift+N: Open a new window in Incognito mode; Ctrl +J: Open recent downloads; Shift+Esc: Open Google Chrome’s task manager; Alt+Enter: Open URL in a new tab after typing the URL manually; Ctrl/Shift+F5: Reload the current page while ignoring cached content.
Create a work-friendly home page
Wish
for a more work-friendly home page? Chrome is there to help. Check out
Momentum, a cool app from the Chrome Web store. It actually helps you be
more productive by letting you add your to-do’s for the day, including
any priority tasks. Moreover, everyday it welcomes you with some
stunning wallpapers, so no more boring grey screen.
Search for the images using Google reverse image lookup
There
have been times where you’ve looked up for a certain image and you have
not been able to download it. Not anymore. Simply right click on the
image, and hit the Search Google for image option. Chrome will launch a
new tab, and using Google’s reverse image lookup it’ll search for
similar images on the web. How cool is that?
Chrome’s Task Manager
Chrome
is a very power hungry browser, we all know. So how to make it eat a
little less of your RAM? It’s simple. Hit Shift+Esc and it’ll show you
Chrome’s own task manager, which provides detailed info about the
running tabs, extensions, plug-ins etc. You can see which app or
extension is sucking up so much of your RAM, and kill it there and then.
It gives you a good bifurcation of the resources each app or page is
consuming.
Remote desktop access through Chrome
Chrome
can also be used for remote desktop access, just like Team Viewer and
other such applications. And the process too is very simple. All you
have to do is install the Google Chrome Remote Desktop App on both
machines, and follow the easy instructions provided. The remote system
sharing is secure, and authenticated by user shared PINs.
Chrome Dictionary
Reading
something on the web and you don’t know what the word means? No
worries, just install Google Dictionary from the Chrome’s webstore. Once
installed, simply hit the dictionary and then select the word you want
the meaning for. It’ll open a pop up and show you the meaning.