20.10.2010., 17:05
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#509
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Pijem samo KAJ
Datum registracije: Jan 2004
Lokacija: Vž
Postovi: 2,695
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Citiraj:
Give it a Try
To try Chrome's built-in GPU acceleration, you need to run a cutting edge version of Chrome (even more cutting edge than the canary builds). You can find recent build of Chromium - the open source project behind Chrome - here. You can easily install Chromium parallel to Chrome and the two installs generally don't interfere with each other.
By installing Chromium, you will also get a chance to test Google Chrome Labs. You can find more information about this feature here.
Once installed, you need to run the application with the --enable-accelerated-compositing flag. To do so, you can either run the program from the terminal and set this switch by hand, or - in Windows - check the properties for the executable and append the flag to the target in the properties dialog.
Chances are that you won't notice too much of a difference right now, though you will probably notice some speed-ups while viewing highly complex pages.
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izvor: http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives...gle_chrome.php
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