Software giant Google has recently released its brand new open source web browser, Chrome. Marketing it as a safer, faster and more stable way of browsing the net than its rivals.
When you first install Chrome you will be impressed at the acres of screen real estate it opens up. You may very well enter an agoraphobic hysteria at all the expansive space if you're accustomed to toolbars making up three-quarters of your screen.
At the same time, in doing away with all the extra toolbars, searchbars and the like, Chrome keeps things simple by integrating almost everything into the address bar. From here you can look up web addresses as usual but also use it to do a Google search or search your history.
One of the major features of Chrome is the development of independent processes for each site tab you have open. What this ultimately means is that if something goes wrong with a web page in one of the tabs you have open it won't trigger the cataclysmic end of the universe. Instead, all that will happen is that individual tab is dropped allowing you to browse as normal (minus the culprit tab).