Do-over! Google gives Chrome a reset button
Google on Tuesday shipped Chrome 29, patching 25 vulnerabilities and rolling out under-the-hood changes the company said would offer more relevant suggestions when users typed in URLs or search strings.
The upgrade also sported a new option that restores the browser to near-factory defaults—think of it as a take-a-mulligan button—which can come in handy when mystery problems persist.
As usual, Google highlighted only a few changes in the newest Chrome.
The technology behind the "Omnibox," as Google insists on calling the combined search-address field, has been improved, the company said in a blog, and should result in "more timely and contextually relevant suggestions" appearing when users type in URLs or conduct a Web search or previously viewed sites.
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