



If you’re setting up Chrome Remote Desktop to visit your own Mac at home or office, the Mac needs to be set up through the app with a six-digit PIN that is used to ensure that only those who know the PIN can get in. You can even use the free Chrome Remote Desktop app on your iPad or iPhone to control a Mac, Windows, Linux, or ChromeOS machine anywhere. Chrome Remote Desktop also lets you access your own computer from anywhere you’re using Chrome. With the Chrome browser installed on both of the computer you wish to control or access, it’s easy to do user-to-user screen sharing that’s perfect for supporting another computer user. There are a number of ways to remotely control another computer, but I don’t think I’ve found one that’s quite as simple - and free - as Chrome Remote Desktop. If your kids are bugging you for apps to run on their Mac, the Chrome Web Store might just be a place to find no- or low-cost apps that will keep ’em happy. Within seconds, the app is installed, and I’m ready to start writing and saving my documents in the cloud. Searching for writing apps, there’s Writer - which acts a lot like many of the distraction-free writing apps that are available on OS X.

Click that icon, and you’re in a large - and mostly free - app store. By default, one of those is the Web Store. From within Chrome, click the “apps” button on the left side of the favorites bar (see image below), and a screen is displayed showing icons for all of the Chrome apps you have installed. Both ChromeOS and Chrome can run apps that are specifically written for the platform, meaning that if you have a need for an app that you just can’t find on Mac OS X, there’s a chance you might be able to find it in the Chrome Web Store.įor example, let’s say you need a writing app and some of the OS X apps out there are just too expensive for your tastes. In today’s Friday Five, I’ll show you five things that you can do in Chrome that are impossible in Apple’s default Mac web browser.Ĭhrome isn’t just a browser, it’s also the basis for the web-based operating system known as ChromeOS that runs on Chromebook laptops. But Google Chrome is a powerful web browser that provides many capabilities that just aren’t available in Safari. If web traffic reports at many Apple-centric websites are any indication, most Mac owners choose to use the default web browser - Safari - for their Internet travels.
