Notes around the Internet.

Posts Tagged: Chrome

What I expect from a Mac native App: you should be able to look up in built-in dictionary panel by moving your mouse on a word, and then type Ctrl-Cmd-D (or right-click → Look up in Dictionary.)
And Google Chrome can’t do this, even it’s reaching version 11 on beta channel.
The example image above is Colloquy, an IRC client.

What I expect from a Mac native App: you should be able to look up in built-in dictionary panel by moving your mouse on a word, and then type Ctrl-Cmd-D (or right-clickLook up in Dictionary.)

And Google Chrome can’t do this, even it’s reaching version 11 on beta channel.

The example image above is Colloquy, an IRC client.

Picture above: Screenshot of Chrome 9 rendering <meter> and <progress> under OS X with appearances of native system UI. Samples from quackit.com.
A newer build of WebKit and Chrome 9+ now renders HTML5 <meter> and <progress> elements. Opera 11 also supports the two elements, yet rendering two alike as the same element in appearance.  Firefox 4 beta 11 hasn’t support the two tags. The WebKit Safari 5.0.3 is using seems too old, which doesn’t support them, either.

Picture above: Screenshot of Chrome 9 rendering <meter> and <progress> under OS X with appearances of native system UI. Samples from quackit.com.

A newer build of WebKit and Chrome 9+ now renders HTML5 <meter> and <progress> elements. Opera 11 also supports the two elements, yet rendering two alike as the same element in appearance.  Firefox 4 beta 11 hasn’t support the two tags. The WebKit Safari 5.0.3 is using seems too old, which doesn’t support them, either.

Source: quackit.com

User Interface inconsistency in Google Chrome 8 (Dev) for Mac. The drop-menu shouldn&#8217;t behave like this. Just launch your Safari or some apps on your Mac to see how it should look like.

User Interface inconsistency in Google Chrome 8 (Dev) for Mac. The drop-menu shouldn’t behave like this. Just launch your Safari or some apps on your Mac to see how it should look like.