


Themes affect the Shelf, App Launcher, and Quick Settings panel. The theme can be toggled from the Quick Settings menu. Google is testing more defined light and dark themes for Chromebooks. You can try out the new permission “chips” right now by enabling the flag at chrome://flags/#permission-chip Testing Light & Dark Themes for Chrome OS Clicking the chip, which appears as a blue oval, brings up the permission prompt you’re used to seeing. The chip first appears with full text such as “Use Your Location?” After a few seconds, it minimizes to simply a small icon. Instead of the pop-up that covers the website content, a new “chip” appears to the left of the URL. Less Intrusive Permission RequestsĬhrome 88 is experimenting with a smaller and less intrusive way to ask for permissions. Since it’s now built into Chrome, the add-on is unnecessary. LBS was designed for IT admins to call up Microsoft Internet Explorer in Chrome for older apps written for that browser as well as intranet sites. Chrome 88 takes it a step further and disables all installed instances of the add-on. With Chrome 85, Google removed its Legacy Browser Support add-on as the functionality became baked into Chrome. This shouldn’t come as a shock, since Apple hasn’t supported Yosemite since 2017. Mac users will need OS X 10.11 El Capitan or newer to use Chrome 88.

#VERIMATRIX VIEWRIGHT PLUGIN CHROME FOR MAC OS X#
Google is officially dropping support for Mac OS X 10.10 Yosemite in Chrome 88. If you want to use FTP, you’ll need a separate FTP app. Google’s usage data showed that very few people used FTP. Google has been working on removing FTP from Chrome for a while, but it was still available for some people-and a flag could enable it.
