Google Chrome offline installer:
You can use offline installer after the store this file in any time.I will give you Update Version of offline installer.Now you can Download Google chrome offline installer in 32 bit and 64 bit.
Chrome Extensions:
The Chrome Web Store is a mess, sure, but that doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t use legitimate extensions to improve your browser experience—whether that’s on Google Chrome or the resource-friendlier alternative, Microsoft’s Edge Chromium.
Tempting as it might be to pack your browser full of every helpful extension you can get, that bit about “resources” wasn’t just my lame attempt at a joke: at some point, you’re going to want to be strategic about your selections, because you probably don’t want to slow your browser to a crawl. I feel like I have a few too many extensions now, and I’m hopeful that working on this article will convince me to remove a handful from my browser.
That said, there are also some extensions I think everyone should know about. They might be obvious to you; they might be completely new. You have to start somewhere, which is why I’m going to share the extensions I always use in the hopes that it gives you a few gems (or a fill suite) to try.
If you have suggestions for other extension that you would defend at any cost, please leave them in the comments! I’m always looking for that next, great extension, and would be more than happy to check it out and share it with your fellow Lifehacker fans—if it’s awesome, of course.
Change Path of installation for chrome:
Google Chrome gives you many options for personalizing your Web browsing experience, such as productivity extensions and offline Gmail support. One customization feature it lacks, though, is a custom installation directory. By default, Chrome installs into your user account's AppData folder, and the installation routine doesn't let you change the directory. While technically, Chrome will always install to this default folder, you can alter that folder so Chrome will actually install its data to another location. This can be especially helpful if you have limited space on your C: drive and need to conserve what you have left.
Setup
Log in to an administrator account on your computer if you installed Google Chrome as part of the Google Pack. Standard accounts don't have the necessary access privileges to uninstall Chrome if the Google Pack was installed for all user accounts. If you installed Google Chrome only, administrative privileges shouldn't matter.
Download the Junction program by Mark Russinovich at Microsoft's TechNet website (see Resources). This program will allow you to create symbolic links in folders on your computer. Your computer treats these links like standard folders, but all data is actually directed to another location. This means that while Chrome does install to its default folder, all its data actually resides in another location.
Copy the Junction.exe file within the ZIP folder to the directory C:\Windows\system32. You can delete it after you finish installing Chrome if you want.
Uninstall Google Chrome if it's still on your computer. You cannot change an existing Chrome installation directory.
Symbolic Links
Locate the Chrome installation folder by clicking the "Start" button and typing "%LocalAppData%\Google" without quotation marks. ("%LocalAppData%" is an environmental variable that opens your user account's "AppData\Local" folder.")
Delete the Chrome folder, if it's still there.
Navigate in a new Windows Explorer window to the directory where you want to install Chrome, while still leaving the old Google installation directory window open. You can use any local directory you want, even one on a different hard drive.
Create a new Chrome folder in this directory. You can use any folder name you want, but the simplest approach is to use "Chrome."
Open the Command Prompt. You can do this by clicking the "Start" button and typing "cmd" and then pressing "Enter." Here you can issue commands to the Junction.exe file you installed simply by typing "junction" (with no quotation marks) followed by a space.
Type "junction" and then a space; then, in quotation marks, type the original directory of the first installation folder. (You can type it in full or use the "%LocalAppData%" environmental variable.) Junction will create a symbolic link at that location. On the same line, type another space and then, also in quotation marks, type the new installation directory to the folder you created a few moments ago. For example, if you're creating a symbolic link to a folder named Google on your D: drive, this is what you would type (without the final period): junction "%LocalAppData%\Google\Chrome" "D:\Google\Chrome". If you used a different folder name than Chrome for the new installation directory, type that instead of "Chrome" in the second directory. Now press "Enter." You'll see confirmation of the action Junction took in the Command Prompt, and if you look in the old installation directory, you'll see a new folder named Chrome.
Check to make sure the Chrome symbolic link works properly. You can double-click it in the original Google installation directory, and if you created the link correctly, you'll be taken to the new installation directory automatically. (You can see the directory near the top of the window.) If you made a mistake, look in the Command Prompt to see if an error code is listed there below the command you typed; then carefully type the entire "Junction" command in the Command Prompt again, making sure the line is free of errors.
Type "exit" (without quotation marks) and press "Enter" in the Command Prompt to close it.
Download and install Chrome normally (see Resources). Because of the symbolic link you created, the data will install to the new directory you specified. You can check this by right-clicking on the original Google installation folder and selecting "Properties." The data size for the Google folder will not reflect the "Chrome" program data (though it will reflect the program data for other Google products, if you have them installed).
Sammary:
Google Chrome is making it easier to reset compromised passwords
No result found, try new keyword!Google Chrome is adding a new feature that will make it easier for users to reset stored passwords that have been detected as compromised in data breaches.
Google Chrome's new feature will automatically group your tabs
No result found, try new keyword!With the next update for Chrome, Google is planning to automatically create a tab group if you open multiple tabs with the same domain.
Google offers high-risk Chrome users additional scanning of risky files
Google is providing a new “risky files” scanning feature to Chrome users enrolled in its Advanced Protection Program (APP).
About the Advanced Protection Program
Google introduced the Advanced Protection Program in 2017.
It’s primarily aimed at users whose accounts are at high risk of compromise through targeted attacks – journalists, human rights and civil society activists, campaign staffers and people in abusive relationships, executives and specific employees – but anyone can sign up for it.
It offers:
Some features, like the one announced on Wednesday, will work only if the user uses Google Chrome and is signed into it with their Advanced Protection Program identity.
Additional scanning
Chrome started warning APP users when a downloaded file may be malicious last year, but now it will also give them the ability to send risky files for additional scanning by Google Safe Browsing’s full suite of malware detection technology before opening them.
“When a user downloads a file, Safe Browsing will perform a quick check using metadata, such as hashes of the file, to evaluate whether it appears potentially suspicious. For any downloads that Safe Browsing deems risky, but not clearly unsafe, the user will be presented with a warning and the ability to send the file to be scanned,” Chrome engineers explained.
“If the user chooses to send the file, Chrome will upload it to Google Safe Browsing, which will scan it using its static and dynamic analysis techniques in real time. After a short wait, if Safe Browsing determines the file is unsafe, Chrome will warn the user. As always, users can bypass the warning and open the file without scanning, if they are confident the file is safe. Safe Browsing deletes uploaded files a short time after scanning.”
Aside from helping users, the new feature is expected to help Google improve their ability to detect malicious files.
Stand Alone Installation for Google Chrome:
Erin McManaway holds a B.A. in professional writing from Francis Marion University, where she earned the Richard B. Larsen Memorial Award for Business and Technical Writing. She has worked in materials development, media and information technology in the nonprofit sector since 2006. McManaway has also been a writer and editor since 2008.

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