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Back in September of last year, Google unveiled an early look at an interesting (and rather hilarious) new project:
Chrome Frame
. What it does is take Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser and basically turn it into Google Chrome via a plug-in. Today, that plug-in has progressed enough that Google is graduating it to full beta status. “
We think it’s really stable,” engineer Alex Russell tells us in noting the move to beta.
To use Chrome Frame, all a user has to do is
go here and install
the plug-in on either IE6, IE7, or IE8 running on Windows 7, Vista, or XP. For developers, it’s even easier to target these users: they just have to include a meta tag in their sites’ code and their pages will start to render in IE (with Chrome Frame installed) just as they would in Chrome itself.
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