Google currently testing data compression feature for Chrome Browser

chrome-for-android

 

Chrome is no doubt one of the most popular web browsers on our Android devices, but it appears that Google is intent on making the web browsing experience just a little faster than it already is. Taking a page from web browsers like that from Opera, Google has unveiled a preliminary build of its Chromium web browser that utilizes data compression. Here’s how Google describes the data compression feature:

“Reduce data consumption by loading optimized web pages via Google proxy servers”.

So essentially Google’s data compression will do two things: provide more efficient security and speed up page load times. More efficient security comes from the Chrome browser using SPDY (the company’s proxy servers) which forces SSL encryption for all sites. The speeding up of the load page times on the other hand, is done by multiplexing multiple streams of data over a single network connection and assigning high or low priorities to page resources being requested from a server.

Google hasn’t exactly made this feature public yet, but it is available to test out for those of you Android 4.2 users who like to be ambitious and try things out. Hit the break for the full instructions on how to get this neat feature going.

 

  • Go to Settings, About Phone.

  • Find the build number

  • Tap on the build number repeatedly about seven times

  • Note that after the third tap, you’ll see a snarky dialog that says you are four taps away from being a developer.

  • After the seventh tap you will see a message that says “You are now a developer.”

Once all is done, the Developer Settings option (which you need to enable USB debugging) will again be in the device’s Settings app.

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