Showing posts with label browser. Show all posts
Showing posts with label browser. Show all posts

Friday, 28 November 2014

Chrome Will Start Blocking All Remaining NPAPI Plugins In January


Starting in January 2015, Google’s Chrome browser will block all old-school Netscape Plug-In API (NPAPI) plugins. This doesn’t come as a huge surprise, given that Google started its efforts to remove NPAPI plugins more than a year ago.
Over the last year, Google went from recommending that developers move away from this old architecture to actively blocking almost all NPAPI plugins. There was, however, always a whitelist that allowed some of the most popular NPAPI plugins like Microsoft’s Silverlight, Unity and Google’s own Google Earth plugin to continue to run in the browser. Starting in January, even that’s going away and all of these plugins will be blocked by default.
Other plugins that will be affected by this move include the Google Talk and Facebook plugins. Most of the whitelisted plugins saw their usage decline since Chrome started the deprecation program, but according to Google’s own data, Silverlight still remains popular with 11% of Chrome users launching it at least once per month. Most of that usage is probably from Netflix users, but now that Netflix is slowly moving away from Silverlight, too, the impact will likely be less than those numbers suggest.


Enterprises, which may still run some mission-critical NPAPI plugins, will be able to bypass these restrictions for the time being. Come September 2015, however, Google will completely remove support for these plugins from Chrome.

Source:Techcrunch 

Tuesday, 2 July 2013

Opera 15 Chromium-based browser officially launched for PC and Mac

While the non-final build of Opera's
new browser for PC and Mac was
simply called "Next," today it's
chosen the more formal title of Opera
15 for its official release. There aren't
any features of note that we hadn't
seen in the desktop preview of the
WebKit-based software (or should we
call it Blink-based? ), but to jog your
memory, it sports a fresh design, a
Discover feature for catching up on
the latest news, and a tweaked Speed
Dial menu for quick access to your
favorite corners of the internet. Also,
the web-clipping Stash feature,
predictive address-come-search bar,
new download manager and "Off-Road
mode" for extra compression on lousy
connections are all included in the
final version. We ran a quick
SunSpider benchmark on the Mac
build of Opera 15, in which it scored
167ms, compared with 171ms in
Chrome.