Here are 21 tweaks you need to change in Google Chrome to add new functionality,
speed up your browsing, and improve your overall experience. First we'll start in
the normal Chrome settings page. By default, Chrome will enable itself to run
in the background, but when you close Chrome, you should expect that it will
close, instead of having some processes run in the background. Disable this to
prevent Chrome from running in the background. Next, let's take a look at the
privacy and security settings. All of these are a matter of personal
preference. If you want to send more data to Google, you can help them identify
malicious websites more easily. However, on the other hand, you are sending data
to Google, which is inherently a privacy risk. For the next few items, we'll be in
the Chrome flags page, which can be found by going to the address shown on your
screen now. Here you can access even more settings that have the potential of
improving your experience. I say "potential" because all of these are
experimental and can have bugs, which is why they are not enabled by default.
However if any of them mess up your browser, all you have to do is turn them
off. Let's begin with Omnibox UI Show Suggestion Favicons. When you enable
this, rather than just having a generic page icon in your omnibox, when you are
searching for something, it will display the websites favicon, making it much
easier to identify the website. Next is include title for the current URL in the
omnibox and omnibox UI vertical layout. When enabling these flags, it will show
the website title not just the URL when you are searching for something in the
omnibox. Next is no state prefetch. This can help improve your browsing speed as
Chrome can intelligently figure out what websites you may go to next. However, be
warned that this can cause more data usage than normal.
Next is scroll prediction. This predicts your scrolling behavior and loads those
elements on the web page first. This can help speed up your overall web browsing
experience. Next is HDR mode. This is only
applicable if have a HDR display, but if you do, you should probably turn this on.
Next we have some UI changes. If you like material design, this set is perfect for
you. By typing in material design, you will uncover a whole wealth of settings
that make your Chrome look more compliant with material design,
which can theme things like the Chrome extensions page.
I love material design so I keep it on. Next is picture-in-picture. Do you know the
picture-in-picture on Android or iOS? Well, this is similar to those. By double
right-clicking on a YouTube video, you can enable picture-in-picture mode.
However, I found this a little buggy and inconsistent, but it is a cool feature
nevertheless. Next is fast tab close. This can speed up the time whenever you are
closing many Chrome tabs. Normally, when you want to close a tab, Chrome closes
down all the processes, before the tab actually disappears in the user
interface. What this does is that it gets rid of the tab immediately, and then
closes it in the background, giving the impression of making it faster. Next is
experimental QUIC protocol. This is faster and more secure than existing
protocols, like TCP and UDP. This is a new protocol that hasn't been implemented on
many websites yet, but is much faster. Next is smooth scrolling. This is very
subjective. I personally like smooth scrolling, but many people don't like it
and find that it gives the impression of being slow. Keep this on turn this off
if you don't like it. Next is tab discarding. With this enabled, Chrome will
intelligently remove tabs from RAM when there isn't much RAM left, so when you go
back to the tab, it will reload it. This can be good or bad depending on how you
think about it. It can be good to save your computer's RAM, but can be bad, as
if you are filling out a form or something, Chrome will cause it to
refresh, which could cause you to lose your progress. Next is tab audio muting
UI control. By default, Chrome will tell you which tabs have audio, however, with
this enabled you can click on the sound icon to instantly mute the tab, saving
you time. Next is scroll anchoring. Does it ever happen where you are on a
website, and it suddenly moves down because new elements are loading?
What this does is it intelligently keeps your place on the website, regardless of
the content that keeps loading above. This is incredibly helpful on desktop as
well as mobile devices. Next is show save copy button. What this does is, whenever a
website is down or can't load, it will offer you to view the cached version
that Google has stored, which can be incredibly helpful if you are trying to
find some kind of specific information on that page.
Next, we have parallel downloading. This helps speed up your downloading by
downloading files bit by bit in a parallel fashion, which can speed up your
downloads. Speaking of speeding chrome up, enabling experimental canvas features
can speed up your web page loading experience by letting Chrome use opaque
canvases, where it makes assumptions about transparent content and images and
does not load content that will not be shown. Another way of speeding chrome up
is by increasing the number of raster threads.
I recommend increasing it to 4. Raster threads are away computers read images
from websites which use pixels to form images. This can speed up slow loading
pictures on websites. Finally enable Simple Cache for HTML, which optimizes
the way Chrome allocates disk space and can help pages load quickly. After this, I
recommend clearing your website data to get the full effect. And those are the 20
Chrome settings that can make your experience better. Thank you so much for
watching if you liked the video, like it. If you hate it, dislike it. Subscribe for
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always thanks for watching.
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