Does Google enjoy teasing and sometimes outright torturing some of its products' most devoted fans? It can seem that way.
Tucked away inside a recent bleeding-edge Chrome build is a "Following feed" that has some bloggers dreaming of the return of Google Reader. It's unlikely, but never say never when it comes to Google product decisions.
Chrome added a sidebar for browsing bookmarks and Reading List articles back in March. Over the weekend, the Chrome Story blog noticed a new flag in Gerrit, the unstable testing build of Chrome's open source counterpart Chromium. Enabling that #following-feed-sidepanel
flag (now also available in Chrome's testing build, Canary) adds another option to the sidebar: Feed.
Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments
Does Google enjoy teasing and sometimes outright torturing some of its products' most devoted fans? It can seem that way.
Tucked away inside a recent bleeding-edge Chrome build is a "Following feed" that has some bloggers dreaming of the return of Google Reader. It's unlikely, but never say never when it comes to Google product decisions.
Chrome added a sidebar for browsing bookmarks and Reading List articles back in March. Over the weekend, the Chrome Story blog noticed a new flag in Gerrit, the unstable testing build of Chrome's open source counterpart Chromium. Enabling that #following-feed-sidepanel
flag (now also available in Chrome's testing build, Canary) adds another option to the sidebar: Feed.
Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments
August 17, 2022 at 03:39AM
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