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Google published a Chrome app in the Windows Store earlier today, which just directed users to a download link to install the browser.Microsoft isn’t impressed with Google’s obvious snub of ...
After a Chrome Installer app showed up on the Microsoft Store this morning, it has since been removed. The app was nothing more than a web wrapper designed to download the Chrome browser.
While that could potentially come in handy for people searching for Chrome on the Microsoft Store, it could be confusing to Windows 10 S users, who would be able to download the installer app, but ...
The listing for Google Chrome that appeared in the Windows Store was simply an installer app that loaded a link to download Chrome instead of loading a Microsoft-compliant version of the browser.
Chrome itself is not a Store app. While Microsoft has developed a system, "Centennial," for packaging existing Windows applications and distributing them through the Store—a convenient ...
Google published its “installer” app, a tool that downloads and installs the desktop version of Chrome on Windows 10, on the Microsoft Store on Monday, December 18.
Because Chrome still isn't technically in the Microsoft Store, this Google Chrome Installer doesn't work on Windows 10 S. It'll download, but when the Installer tries to install Chrome itself, the ...
There are many reasons Google won’t likely bring Chrome to the Windows Store, but the primary reason is probably related to Microsoft’s Windows 10 S restrictions.
Because the Microsoft Store actually imposes minimal verification or validation of submitted applications, Microsoft's automated processes duly published the app. It was available for a few hours.
In this post, we will see how to get extensions from the Chrome Web Store on the new Microsoft Edge browser powered by the Chromium engine. It is worth noting that this tutorial will only work for ...
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