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about:tabs: Informs the user about tabbed browsing. Internet Explorer shows this page upon creating a new tab if the "Open home page for new tabs instead of a blank page" setting is enabled. 7–11 about:inprivate: Appears when the use initiates InPrivate Browsing; contains information about this feature. 9–11 about:compat
One of Chrome's differentiating features is the New Tab Page, which can replace the browser home page and is displayed when a new tab is created. Originally, this showed thumbnails of the nine most visited websites, along with frequent searches, recent bookmarks, and recently closed tabs; similar to Internet Explorer and Firefox with Google ...
In [1] a web browser, the address bar (also location bar or URL bar) is the element that shows the current URL. The user can type a URL into it to navigate to a chosen website. In most modern browsers, non-URLs are automatically sent to a search engine. In a file browser, it serves the same purpose of navigation, but through the file-system ...
Access keys are specified in HTML using the accesskey attribute. The value of an element’s accesskey attribute is the key the user will press (typically in combination with one or more other keys, as defined by the browser) in order to activate or focus that element.
In the Preferences menu of Safari, choose the Saft section, then the Shortcuts tab. Click Add and enter "Wikipedia" (without the quotes) for the name, with "w" (again, no quotes) for the shortcut. The URL is similar to those listed above, with a change in the last character. Enter the text below in the URL field.
Tab hoarding is digital hoarding of web browser tabs. Users may accumulate tabs as reminders of tasks to research or complete [13] (rather than using dedicated reminder software). They may use multiple browser windows to organize tabs or direct focus; [13] however, leaving multiple windows open can exacerbate tab clutter. [14]
IE Tab, a browser add-on used to render pages with MSHTML user interface (originally available for both Mozilla Firefox and Google Chrome, now only for the latter) Impulse (content delivery), uses MSHTML to render "Explore" page, as well as several of the "Community" pages; LimeWire, which renders the page "New@Lime"
Google Chrome, like Firefox, does not have built in support for web slices. However, the extension API new to Chrome 4 allows extensions to be created to give the ability to relatively simply create arbitrary webslices [ 21 ] of any content from any page.