You will notice that, on many occasions, ads get past Chrome’s Adblock Plus filter. If you have ever used both Firefox’s and Chrome’s version of Adblock Plus, you will agree that the Firefox version is far superior. Last but not least, Iron has its own built-in Adblock.Fortunately, Iron doesn’t leave old files behind after an update, unlike Chrome. When one does come out (usually monthly), just download and install it over the old. Iron updates come out less frequently, and there is no auto-update feature (but the developer says it is in the works).Another built-in element of Chrome that isn’t in Iron is the bundled Adobe Flash Player.I personally recommend SumatraPDF – which also has its own plugin for in-browser viewing. But heck, there are many great alternative PDF readers out there. If you are a fan of Chrome’s built-in PDF Viewer, I am sorry to say it is not included in Iron.Here is a summary of the differences between Chrome and Iron, directly from the mouth of the developer of SRWare Iron: (Or, at least most of them work - I haven’t tried all Chrome extensions so I can’t say for sure 100% of them do work with Iron.) There are subtle differences, but generally speaking a normal user would not be able to distinguish the two browsers aside from their logos. That means Iron performs just as fast, and Chrome extensions/addons work on Iron, too. In essence, Chrome and Iron are the same browser. In other words, Iron’s developer took Chrome’s open source code and made his own fork of the browser, minus all the Google junk (and other controversial privacy issues). It is based on the open source Chromium project, which is what makes up Chrome for the most part. SRWare Iron is marketed as a privacy-oriented version of Google Chrome. Well! What better time than now to introduce Chrome’s little brother, SRWare Iron. Since Chrome is open source, third party developers have the ability to take Chrome, keep the good parts, strip the bad parts, and provide us with what Chrome should have been from the start. (And the list doesn’t end there.) It’s really disappointing how Google hurts an otherwise great product with all the above mentioned. Or the fact that Chrome likes to leave its old files behind after an update. Or the Google Update plugin that is secretly implanted into Firefox. Unfortunately, Chrome has its fair share of annoyances too. Take, for example, the Google Updater that is shoved up your computer’s hard disk when installing Chrome. It is fast, pretty, and (typically) renders web pages well.
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