Uptodown is a multi-platform app store specialized in Android. Our goal is to provide free and open access to a large catalog of apps without restrictions, while providing a legal distribution platform accessible from any browser, and also through its official native app.

While you should clear your web browser's cache, cookies, and history periodically in order to prevent or resolve performance problems, you may wish to record some of your saved information first. If you are unable to do so, see Troubleshooting alternatives below.


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If you don't see instructions below for your specific version or browser, search your browser's Help menu for "clear cache". If you're unsure what browser version you're using, from the Help menu or your browser's menu, select About [browser name]. In Firefox, if you don't see the menu bar, press Alt.

If you need to clear your cache, cookies, and history for troubleshooting purposes, but aren't yet prepared to lose the content listed above, you may wish to consider using a private browsing window in your preferred browser as a temporary solution:

The steps to clear your cache, cookies, and history may differ depending on the model of your Android device and your preferred browser, but you should be able to clear your cache and data from your application management settings menu:

However, I am unsure if it is secure enough, cryptographically. I know, broadly, that when we type in our password, it gets converted into a key that deciphers our data. If it is an unlock with pin option, that does not reset with browser restart, how does it work?

I needed to launch Chrome programmatically, then open some more tabs, then close them all when I was done, even if an existing Chrome browser was already open. I could find partial answers, but nothing simple that worked with already running browsers.

It launches a new process for a Chrome instance, launches additional tabs into that new Chrome webbrowser instance, and finally using "terminate()" when finished to close the original browser launched by the subprocess() and its webbrowser child tabs. This works even when there is an existing Chrome browser process running.

N.B. If there is an pre-existing browser instance running, my_chrome_process.terminate() will NOT terminate it; it will terminate only the instance started by the subprocess.Popen() code below. This is the expected behavior.

Thanks for the reply Johan. I ran into a different problem. I installed the extension in Brave Brower, ActivityWatch is getting raw data image.png1112385 32.7 KB but still, nothing is showing in the browser tab, nor domain neither URLs.

Usually I need much pages to be open at one time.So there is a Windows task panel.When I open multiple Google Chrome windows by Ctrl+N they appear in some order at the Windows task panel. Also in each windows I can create multiple tabs with pages (Ctrl+T).

I would like to create certain order of Google chrome Windows in the task panel. Say first is window with multiple tabs of my email accounts (gmail, yahoo mail etc). Second is window with tabs of google drive pages (different spreadsheets and docs files pages).

Could you please help with following:1. Why order changes?2. How can I change the order without closing and reopening all the windows?3. If I create set of startup pages in the Google Chrome settings all of them open in the separate tabs but within one window. May I create a setting to open them in certain order of windows on each startup of Google Chrome?

8 years later, and the order of Google Chrome windows still changes by itself sometimes... On Windows 10, I usually only need to bring the window I am currently using to the right of the group in the taskbar, and the easiest way I found is the following:

When I browse to site with Chrome browser, at times it say "Redirecting ..... " and then see a white blank page, then page does not load. I do see BCR Icon lit green. If I turn off BCR, the site loads fine.

An issue I'm running into is that Google Chrome prevents its browser window from being narrower than 500 pixels. So I was using browsers, like Internet Explorer, to see how website designs adjust for small-screen devices. The problem is that I'm most familiar with the development tools available through Chrome. And there are times where it's easier to tweak the HTML and CSS code directly in Chrome versus going back to my normal code editor, editing the code, uploading the modified script, and then testing the changes. It turns out that there are a couple of options for addressing the issue.

I primarily use Chrome when testing new design ideas since that's what the analytics says most people use when visiting the websites I manage. Of course, I'll check the designs in other popular browsers like Internet Explorer and Firefox. However, most of my time is spent with Chrome.

The first option is to use Chrome's built-in feature for testing websites for small-screen devices called Device Mode. The option provides a few ways to quickly adjust the browser window to the desired dimensions. There's even a drop-down menu for selecting popular devices (e.g., iPhone X) that your visitors might use when viewing your website. Selecting a device automatically resizes the window to simulate what the page would look like.

As mentioned earlier, Chrome prevents browser windows from being narrower than 500 pixels. When I'm making a number of successive changes and I want to guarantee that I'll catch whether the changes lead to the design being too wide, I'll use the DevTools window to trick the browser into showing narrower widths.

First, you'll need to make sure Device Mode is no longer active. Deactivating Device Mode is accomplished by clicking the "Toggle device toolbar" icon, shown in Figure 3 above, again. Your page should display how it normally appears in the browser window and the device toolbar should be hidden.

If Chrome's DevTools window isn't already open, open it using the steps described in the previous section (above). The goal is to dock the DevTools window to the side of the browser window. This can be accomplished by

Now you can expand or contract the DevTools window to change how wide your web page appears in the browser. That can be accomplished by grabbing the side of the DevTools window that's adjacent to the web page and dragging the window to the left or right (see Figure 6).

Starting today I've been getting a green border around any and all chrome windows. Some digging (and a REALLY tiny notification thingy) eventually clued me in that ESET banking protection was responsible.


Except a.) I'm not doing any banking or payment right now and b.) the "hide browser's green frame" checkbox does nothing, the border is still there regardless of whether it's checked or not.


Does anybody know what's going on there?

When entering sensitive information such as your bank card ID, it is important to have an indication that the browser is secured and that it's safe to continue with transactions for instance. I understand that there may be people who don't care and write down PIN and other sensitive info on their desktop at hand, however, security companies must use secure approach and practices.

I have been with eset for decade and a half now and this feature is frankly annoying. Great that I can turn it off but it should be off by default. Please stop adding confusing and unwanted visual aids to my browser or anything else. I love eset, I feel my devices are safe, and that is all it needs to do. Work in the background, don't annoy us with adding random visual aids.

Most web browsers include a feature to block pop-up windows. While this may eliminate unwanted or bothersome pop-up windows, the feature sometimes can impede the functionality of legitimate or useful websites.

Some popular Penn-affiliated websites requiring pop-ups include U@Penn and the Penn Online Directory.


Follow the instructions below to configure your web browser to allow pop-up windows for your selected websites.

Note: If you have installed third party applications to block pop-ups (examples include the Google, MSN, and Yahoo! toolbars), be sure to consult the vendor documentation to allow pop-up windows for desired websites.

Note: If you are concerned about allowing pop-ups globally for all websites that you browse, consider using another web browser that allows website exceptions such as Chrome or Firefox.

When a website attempts to launch a new pop-up window, you may see dialog boxes alerting you of pop-up windows that have been blocked. Follow the instructions below to allow pop-up windows on a per-website basis.

I can get it to appear on the bottom of my Treehouse Workplace, but not my browser window. Chrome also always throws up crazy-looking errors not connected to a line; yes, I could ignore this. But, I'd like to get my Chrome browser window looking a lot more like the Treehouse tutorial. Thank you for suggestions. I'm using up-to-date Chrome for Mac version 73.0.3683.75

These browsers support device authentication, allowing the device to be identified and validated against a policy. The device check fails if the browser is running in private mode or if cookies are disabled.

Edge 85+ requires the user to be signed in to the browser to properly pass device identity. Otherwise, it behaves like Chrome without the accounts extension. This sign-in might not occur automatically in a hybrid device join scenario.

Safari is supported for device-based Conditional Access on a managed device, but it can not satisfy the Require approved client app or Require app protection policy conditions. A managed browser like Microsoft Edge will satisfy approved client app and app protection policy requirements.On iOS with 3rd party MDM solution only Microsoft Edge browser supports device policy. ff782bc1db

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