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Posts Tagged ‘Google Chrome’

Google Redirects Some Chrome Users to the Encrypted Search Interface

September 8, 2011 Comments off

Google’s encrypted version has all the features of the standard version and Google could redirect users to the more secure interface. You can now search images, use Google Instant, Instant Preview and other features that were missing from Google SSL. The navigation links are still missing and Google Maps doesn’t support SSL yet.

A Google employee says that Google is “running an experiment with some percentage of Chrome 14 users where we send them to SSL search. The experience is meant to be completely comparable feature-wise to non-SSL search. It is independent of the Chrome 14 installation.” So if you’re using Chrome 14 Beta, you might be redirected to Google SSL.



“With Google search over SSL, you can have an end-to-end encrypted search solution between your computer and Google. This secured channel helps protect your search terms and your search results pages from being intercepted by a third party. This provides you with a more secure and private search experience,” explains Google. An important downside is the loss of performance, but Chrome uses SPDY for all Google URLs, so SSL pages load a lot faster.

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Google Chrome’s Spell Checker Gets Smarter

September 7, 2011 Comments off

Just like Firefox, Chrome doesn’t have a smart spell checker. It uses a dictionary and it shows spelling suggestions for the words that aren’t included in the dictionary. Chrome’s suggestions aren’t always great because they ignore the context.


Google has an excellent spell checker that’s used in Google Search, but Chrome’s team avoided using it because of privacy concerns. It seems that Google changed its mind and some of Chrome’s spelling suggestions will be obtained from Google’s “did you mean” service.


A future update will “integrate the Spelling service (a.k.a. ‘Did you mean’) to a context-menu of Chrome so we can see the spell-check result retrieved from the Spelling service. This change sends a J SON-RPC request to the service in the background and updates a context-menu item.” Even if the suggestions can’t be displayed instantly, they’re a lot better than the suggestions generated by Chrome. An even better idea would be to provide an option to spell check the entire text using Google’s online service.

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