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A page history shows the sequence of edits made to any editable Wikipedia page, the difference between any two revisions, and a menu of special external tools. A page history is sometimes called revision history or edit history. You can view a page's history by clicking the "View history" tab at the top of the associated page (pictured right).
This page describes some of these tricks of the trade. The suggestions here apply mostly to substantive articles with a number of contributors. If the page history indicates that the page is entirely or almost entirely the work of one person, you are dealing with a situation more comparable to evaluating an article on someone's private web site.
Black Menu - similar to Lookup, but can search across all Mediawiki sites except Wikidata; Distracted Reader – Select any text on a webpage to search, read articles right next to it, explore related topics.
This page in a nutshell: The design and features of the Main Page evolved between 2001 and 2006, after which they have remained largely stable. Since most of the text displayed on the Main Page is transcluded from various templates, the full history of the Main Page cannot be viewed by simply selecting the "View history" tab.
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 ...
ChromeOS, a Google Chrome- and Linux-based operating system; User interface chrome, the borders and widgets that frame the content part of a window Chrome (Mozilla) or XUL, the Mozilla XML user interface language; Chrome (programming language) or Oxygene, an Object Pascal implementation for the .NET Framework; Microsoft Chrome, an API for DirectX
Wikiwand - browser extension for Google Chrome and Firefox. Kiwix - offline reader for Wikipedia and its other Wikimedia sister projects. Available for Android, Linux, iOS, Mac OS X, Windows. GoldenDict - multiplatform dictionary browser with native support for Wikipedia, Wiktionary, the Wikimedia projects, and any MediaWiki-based website.
This list may be incomplete. For a complete list, click the "Edit" or "View source" tab and see "Pages transcluded onto the current version of this page" at the bottom Template:Also (edit) (semi-protected) Template:See also (view source) (template protected) Module:Arguments (view source) (template protected)