Rabu, 06 Agustus 2014

Why you should risk using Chrome Beta for Android






Chrome is quickly becoming one of the most popular web browsers in the entire world on most platforms. (And by many accounts, it already is.) When adding new features, testing functionality, or considering changing the way the browser looks and works, Google builds a completely separate version of Chrome. On the desktop Google has a "Canary" build of Chrome and on mobile Google has packaged Chrome Beta for developers and early users who want to "get on the bleeding edge of the web."


Back in 2013 Google gave developers the ability to rol l out beta versions of their applications. All the developers would have to do is create a Google Plus page or Google Group for users to join and link it to their application. When developers pushed out beta updates to test new things in their applications, they could monitor what worked and what broke without having it affecting most of their users. Unlike most developers who are using Google Play's beta channel functionality, Google built a separate beta application which they use to test new features that might make it to the stable build of Chrome.


The question is should you download and use Chrome Beta?





















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