GOOGLE CHROME SPECIAL 27 Incredibly Useful Things You Didn’t Know Chrome Could Do
Give your internet experience a jolt of fresh energy with these easily
overlooked features, options, and shortcuts for Google’s browser.
These days, a browser is more than just a
basic navigator for the web. It’s effectively a second desktop—a gateway to
countless apps, sites, and services. And optimizing that environment can go a
long way in increasing your efficiency.
Google’s Chrome in particular is full of
hidden shortcuts, features, and power-user possibilities. Take the time to
learn these tips, and watch your productivity soar.
(Note that most of the tips here are specific
to the desktop versions of Chrome for Windows PCs and Macs and may not
apply to the browser’s mobile variants.)
LEARN SOME HANDY HIDDEN SHORTCUTS
1. Want to open a link into a new tab
in the background, so it won’t interrupt what you’re doing? Hold down Ctrl-
or Cmd- and click it. To open a link in a whole new window, meanwhile, use
Shift instead. (This’ll work within most areas of Chrome, by the way—including
the History page and the dropdown history list within the Back button,
described above.)
2. You probably know you can press the space
bar to scroll down a full page-length, but there’s another side to that
shortcut: If you press Shift and the space bar together, Chrome will do the
opposite and scroll up by a full page-length at a time.
3. If you ever close a tab by mistake, hit
Ctrl- or Cmd-Shift-T. Chrome will reopen your most recently closed
tab as if nothing had ever happened. (And you can do it multiple
times, too, if there’s more than one tab you’d like to recover.)
4. When you have a bunch of tabs open and
want to hang onto the entire session for later, hit Ctrl-Shift-D. That’ll let
you save all your open tabs into a folder for easy future access.
To restore them, right-click the folder within your bookmarks and select “Open
all” or “Open all in new window.”
Quickly save a
session so you can get back to it later.
5. Skip a step and get info about any
word or phrase in a page by highlighting it and then right-clicking and
selecting the “Search Google” option. You can also highlight a word or phrase
and drag it into Chrome’s address bar to achieve the same result—or drag it
into the area directly to the right of your final tab to launch the search in
a newtab instead of your current one. (Bonus tip: Those same
dragging behaviors can also be used to open links.)
6. Save a link with a single click:
Just click, hold down your mouse button, and drag the link up into Chrome’s
bookmarks bar. Drop it wherever you want, and it’ll be there the next time you
need it.
7. If you download a file and then want to
move it somewhere specific, click on its tile in the download bar that appears
at the bottom of the browser. You can then drag and drop whatever you
downloaded directly onto your desktop or into any folder.
8. You can also drag and drop files
from Chrome’s download bar directly into an online service—like Google
Drive, for instant uploading, or Gmail, for inserting the file as an attachment
in a new message.
9. Should you ever find Chrome mysteriously
misbehaving, remember this command: chrome://restart. Type it into Chrome’s
address bar, and your browser will restart itself and restore all your
tabs and windowsin a jiffy. You never know when it might come in handy.
TEACH YOUR BROWSER SOME NEW TRICKS
10. With 60 seconds of setup, you can give
Chrome its own quick-access scratchpad that’ll let you jot down
thoughts right within the browser—no extensions required. All you have to
do is paste a snippet of code into Chrome’s address bar. Click here or on the image below to view and copy the necessary code.
. . . and then save the page to your
bookmarks bar for easy access. The scratchpad supports text formatting (Ctrl-
or Cmd-B for bold, Ctrl- or Cmd-I for italics, and Ctrl- or Cmd-U for
underlining) and even has a built-in spell check feature. Just open it and
start typing—and if you want to save your thoughts for later retrieval, hit
Ctrl- or Cmd-S.
Create your
own simple scratchpad, right within Chrome.
11. Chrome’s custom search engine feature has
tons of untapped productivity potential. First, you can use it to create
simple shortcuts to pages you visit often—anything from favorite websites
to internal Chrome pages or even the scratchpad described in the previous tip.
Just open up Chrome’s settings, click the line labeled “Manage search engines,”
then click the “Add” command next to the “Other search engines” heading. Type
the name of the page in the “Search engine” field, the shortcut you want for it
in the “Keyword” field, and the page’s full URL in the “URL” field.
For instance, if you want to be able to pull
up Chrome’s settings simply by typing “cs” into your address bar, you could use
“Chrome Settings” as the search engine name, “cs” as the keyword, and
chrome://settings as the URL. To get to your new scratchpad quickly, you could
use “Scratchpad” as the search engine name, “s” as the keyword, and the full
string of code from above as the URL.
12. You can also use Chrome’s custom search
engines feature to create shortcuts for searching any
sites you want. The trick is to first find the full URL of the site’s own
search system—so if you wanted to do it for Fast Company, you’d go
to fastcompany.com, click the search icon in the upper-right corner of the
screen, then search for a word like “test.” The site will take you to
https://www.fastcompany.com/search/test.
With that knowledge in tow, head back to
Chrome’s “Manage search engines” section and click the “Add” command. This
time, type “Fast Company” in as the search engine name, “fastcompany.com” as
the keyword, and “https://www.fastcompany.com/search/%s”—with “%s” taking the
place of the actual query—as the URL.
Custom search
engines take only a minute to set up and can save you ample time in the future.
The next time you start typing
“fastcompany.com” into Chrome’s address bar, you’ll see instructions telling
you to press Tab to search the site. Set up similar systems for shopping sites,
Wikipedia, dictionaries and thesauruses, travel sites, or anything else you
search semi-regularly, and you’ll save valuable time by skipping steps and
jumping straight to the info you need.
13. Want to be able to search your
email directly from Chrome’s address bar? Create a new custom search engine
with the name Gmail, whatever keyword you want (either “gmail.com” or some
shortened command), and “https://mail.google.com/mail/ca/u/0/#search/%s” as the
URL.
14. Search Google Drive from the
address bar by creating a custom search engine with
“https://drive.google.com/drive/u/0/search?q=%s” as the URL.
15. Speaking of Google Drive, if you move
between multiple devices during the day (and at this point, who doesn’t?), make
your life a little easier by telling Chrome to save anything you
download to a cloud-based folder. That way, you’ll be able to find
important files from your desktop, laptop, smartphone, or any other
device—regardless of where the download was actually performed.
First, you’ll have to install the desktop
syncing program for your cloud storage service of choice. Most services,
including Google Drive, Dropbox,
and OneDrive, offer such utilities for all the common operating
systems. Once you set up the program, you’ll have a folder on your local hard
drive that’s always synced to a folder in your cloud storage.
Now, head into Chrome’s settings, click
“Advanced,” and scroll down to the section labeled “Downloads.” Click the
“Change” command and find or create an appropriate subfolder within your
cloud-synced folder. Once you’ve followed those steps on any desktop computers
you want connected, anything you download will be available everywhere you
work—and always accessible via the cloud service’s mobile apps as well.
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF HIDDEN POWER TOOLS
16. Quiet annoying sites once and for
all by right-clicking their tabs (where the title is displayed) and
selecting “Mute site.” This recently added option will prevent the site from
playing any audio on your computer anytime you visit it.
17. Prefer to avoid leaving a trail
as you navigate the web? Open Chrome’s settings, click “Advanced,” and then
turn on the toggle next to “Send a ‘Do Not Track’ request with your browsing
traffic,” located within the “Privacy and security” section.
18. For additional privacy, take advantage of
Chrome’s out-of-the-way option to create multiple user profiles and
allow guest access to your browser. That’ll let someone else use Chrome on
your computer without gaining access to all of your personal data (and without
gunking up your history with whatever sites they visit). Look for the line
labeled “Manage other people” in Chrome’s settings to get started.
19. Chrome’s History page—accessible by
hitting Ctrl- or Cmd-H or by typing chrome://history into your address bar—has
a powerful yet easily overlooked feature: an always-synced list of tabs you
have open in Chrome on other devices. Surf over there anytime you want to find
what you were last viewing on your phone, your tablet, or another computer.
20. The Back button in Chrome’s upper-left
corner does more than you might think. Click it and hold your mouse’s button
down, and you’ll get a pop-up history of recent pages viewed within
your current tab.
Hidden within
Chrome’s Back button is a tab-specific (and fully interactive) history list.
21. Chrome can strip all formatting
from copied text as you paste it—eliminating links, fonts, colors, and
anything else you might not want to carry over. Once you’ve copied some text,
hit Ctrl- or Cmd-Shift-V to give it a whirl.
22. Trying to look at a website that’s
down—or need to step back in time and see how a particular page looked
a while ago? Type cache:website.com into Chrome’s address bar, replacing
website.com with whatever URL you want.
23. Let Chrome act as your file
explorer: Drag and drop any image, video, or audio file into the browser to
open it right then and there—and on Windows, try typing C:\ into Chrome’s
address bar to browse your hard drive’s contents.
ENHANCE YOUR ENVIRONMENT AND ELIMINATE ANNOYANCES
24. Sick of getting those pop-ups asking if
some site can send notifications through your browser? Turn off site
notifications entirelyby opening Chrome’s settings, clicking “Advanced,”
then clicking the line labeled “Content settings.” Next, find and click the
line for “Notifications” and turn the toggle at the top of the page off.
25. The next time you come across a text form
on a website, give yourself a little space to think: Look for the two diagonal
lines in the box’s lower-right corner. Click that area and drag downward, and
ta-da: You can resize the text box to make it as large as you’d like.
Dragging down on the diagonal lines in a
form’s lower-right corner lets you expand the box so you can actually see
everything you’ve typed.
26. Chrome extensions can be incredibly
useful, but they can also create a lot of clutter in your browser’s upper-right
corner. Hide the extension icons you don’t need to see by
right-clicking them and selecting “Hide in Chrome menu” from the options that
appear. You can also just hover your mouse over the far right side of the address
bar until you see a double-sided arrow appear and then drag the address bar
toward the right to extend it and hide multiple extension icons at once.
And if you ever need to get to an
out-of-sight extension icon, just open the main Chrome menu (the three-dot icon
to the right of the extensions). You’ll see all of the icons there.
27. While we’re talking about extensions, did
you know you can create custom keyboard shortcuts for opening
extensions on demand? Some extensions even allow you to create shortcuts
for specific commands. Type chrome://extensions/shortcuts into your browser’s
address bar to set up your own.
BY JR RAPHAEL
FOR ALL THE MISING PORTIONS GOTO
https://www.fastcompany.com/40557798/27-incredibly-useful-things-you-didnt-know-chrome-could-do?utm_source=postup&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Fast%20Company%20Daily&position=2&partner=newsletter&campaign_date=04192018
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