![]() In fact, we launch a new renderer with each tab, and when the tab is closed, the renderer goes away!! You can see it come and go in Activity Monitory. The list is now almost all green and as of this morning we hit our goal (one day early!) to have renderer processes launched. Our goal was to have a renderer being spawned by launching the browser by the end of this week. "We made a list early in the week of the key classes on the critical path to getting a renderer launching and showing bits on the screen. Mike Pinkerton offers more details about the Mac port, which will certainly be released before the Linux version. Our goal is to get a double-clickable app with a working browser window using the real multi-process infrastructure (not TestShell) by mid-February." ![]() "The purpose of this document is to help organize and coordinate the effort to get a browser window up and running on Mac and Linux using as much of the code that is already there as possible (with temporary header and link scaffolding, plus ifdefs) as opposed to writing a bunch of throw-away code that duplicates what already exists on windows. The work to port the Windows version started soon after the initial release and it will soon show some visible results.Ī document from Chromium's site includes a list of remaining features that need to be implemented. The Windows version of Google Chrome was launched in September 2008 and many users asked for Mac and Linux versions.
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