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Google Chrome: a quick look and how to block ads with Privoxy

Google Chrome Logo
Creative Commons License photo credit: Randy Zhang

Google Chrome is no Firefox (yet).

For the last week and a bit, off and on,  I’ve been using Google Chrome (Google’s new entry into the browser wars). On the 3 XP-based systems I’ve used it on, I’ve found it to be very fast, very efficient, and stable. Pretty good performance for a ‘beta’.

I do have concerns about the way Chrome appears to ‘monitor’ my surfing activity (by using Google Gears functionality), but then again, I use Gmail and other Google Apps so I’m sure the Big G knows all about me at this point.

But, without plugin extensibility, Chrome is currently a curiosity. I won’t be using it for my daily work.

One major annoyance is the lack of Adblock. The web is a very marketing-heavy place, and I prefer to selectively view my advertising. The Adblock extension for Firefox allows this.

To achieve an advertising-reduced surfing experience with Chrome, I need to use Privoxy, a local privacy managing Proxy server. It’s a quick install and seems to work flawlessly.

A solution to this for now is http://www.privoxy.org/

1.) Install Privoxy
2.) Click on the Wrench icon in Chrome in the upper right corner
3.) Choose options>Under The Hood>Change proxy settings
4.) A windows box pops up, choose LAN settings (at least this is what it’s called in Vista)
5.) Check off “Proxy settings” and in the address setting add127.0.0.1 and in the port 8118
6.) If you have the option, you can also check off “Bypass proxy for local settings”
7.) Click “Ok”, close chrome and restart it. 

Tada. Enjoy.

Geekzone provided the process (thanks guys!)

Written by bgrier

September 14, 2008 at 8:06 am

Posted in Doing, How to, In the life, Review, Web

Tagged with , , , , , , , , ,

6 Responses

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  1. It’s beta, and it’ll probably stay beta. G00gle has a curious habit of leaving perfectly good software in Beta. ‘Beta’; the new excuse for not having to commit to anything?

    TigerTom

    September 15, 2008 at 7:51 am

  2. @TigerTom – Could be, though beta is short for beta testing, and by releasing a ‘beta’ to the public, you get the benefit of free ‘testing’ on a scale that nobody could afford to pay for in-house.

    bgrier

    September 15, 2008 at 9:11 am

  3. i keep learning about more and more advantages and features with Chrome, with privacy, for example; now if only they would take care of it’s cookie management glitches…

    film fan

    September 16, 2008 at 4:32 am

  4. @film fan – Yeah, cookie handling is pretty simple compared to Firefox. Since it’s still beta, I’m hoping it improves with the next version.

    bgrier

    September 16, 2008 at 8:14 am

  5. The problem with Google is no add-ons available yet and it’s so hard to use it when you work but it’s still okay because pages loads very fast.

    Circuit Breakers

    October 16, 2008 at 12:56 pm

  6. @Circuit Breakers – Heh, it’s still Beta.

    And it’s open source, so if there’s something you need, simply download the code, add it and recompile. There are a number of Chrome variants around currently.

    bgrier

    October 16, 2008 at 1:42 pm


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