Google Chrome Portable 17.0.963.78 Stable has been released. Google Chrome Portable is a web browser that runs web pages and applications with lightning speed. It's designed to be simple and stylish. This release updates Google Chrome to the latest version and adds support for the new-style Java plugin. The latest Beta and Dev builds are also available. It's packaged as a portable app, so you can take your browsing experience with you and it's in PortableApps.com Format so it can easily integrate with the PortableApps.com Platform. It's partially open source freeware for personal and business use.
Update automatically or install from the portable app store in the PortableApps.com Platform.
Features
Google Chrome's features include:
- Quick to start up
- Loads web pages in a snap
- Runs web applications faster than ever
- Designed for efficiency and ease of use
- Search and navigate to web pages from the same box
- Arrange and organize tabs however you wish — quickly and easily
- Get to your favorite websites with just a click, from the thumbnails of your most visited sites in the New Tab page
- Themes to add delight to your browser
PortableApps.com Installer / PortableApps.com Format
Google Chrome Portable is packaged in a PortableApps.com Installer so it will automatically detect an existing PortableApps.com installation when your drive is plugged in. It supports upgrades by installing right over an existing copy, preserving all settings. And it's in PortableApps.com Format, so it automatically works with the PortableApps.com Platform including the Menu and Backup Utility.
Download
Google Chrome Portable is available for immediate download from the Google Chrome Portable homepage. The Development and Beta builds are available from the test section. Get it today!
Comments
Help me understand
March 5 17.0.963.65
March 6 17.0.963.66
March 8 17.0.963.78
If there were published reasons for this continual update, then
maybe I wouldn't feel so puzzled.
I have to ask myself: what is this software that is "fixing?", "removing bugs?",
"adding new features?", "?".
Can anyone state a rational that helps accept all this churning of versions?
Should I just step away from Google Chrome and be happy?
?
Not sure if this helps?
Google Chrome revision log
yes, it helps
Thanks.
At least I might deduce what all the churn is about and then determine if
I want to use Chrome.
Can't judge yet but this looks like what *used* to be beta logs and not stable.
But then, IBM 360/370, CDC 6500 etc. is ancient history so what do I know about
best practices with release engineering.
I guess I shouldn't read the logs for the actual beta stream.