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  2. Yandex Browser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yandex_Browser

    Yandex is facing web search competition in Russia from Google Search. [21] Google Chrome, Russia's most popular web browser, uses Google Search as its default search engine. In June 2012, Mozilla Firefox, the world's third most popular web browser, signed a deal to replace its default search engine Yandex Search with Google Search. [21]

  3. IBM Home Page Reader - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_Home_Page_Reader

    Home Page Reader (Hpr) was a computer program, a self-voicing web browser designed for people who are blind. It was developed by IBM from the work of Chieko Asakawa at IBM Japan. The screen reader met World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) HTML 4.01 specifications, Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 and User Agent Accessibility Guidelines 1.0.

  4. Private browsing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_browsing

    Private browsing modes are commonly used for various purposes, such as concealing visits to sensitive websites (like adult-oriented content) from the browsing history, conducting unbiased web searches unaffected by previous browsing habits or recorded interests, offering a "clean" temporary session for guest users (for instance, on public computers), [7] and managing multiple accounts on ...

  5. Third-party cookies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third-party_cookies

    Third-party cookies are HTTP cookies which are used principally for web tracking as part of the web advertising ecosystem.. While HTTP cookies are normally sent only to the server setting them or a server in the same Internet domain, a web page may contain images or other components stored on servers in other domains.

  6. Google logo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_logo

    The Google big logo when a background image/doodle is set on the home page. The first Google Doodle was in honor of the Burning Man Festival of 1998. [17] [18] The doodle was designed by Larry Page and Sergey Brin to notify users of their absence in case the servers crashed.

  7. Help:Searching from a web browser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Searching_from_a_web...

    Chrome, Chromium (the open source variant of Chrome), and Brave (a browser based on Chromium) all have an address bar can be configured to search Wikipedia. Click the kebab menu to the right of the search bar. Select Preferences on Mac and Linux, or Settings on Windows or Chrome OS. Under Search engine, select Manage search engines.

  8. Address bar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Address_bar

    Some browsers, such as Firefox, [4] Opera and Google Chrome, allow for website-specific searches to be set by the user. For example, by associating the shortcut "!w" with Wikipedia, "!w cake" can be entered into the address bar to navigate directly to the Wikipedia article for cake.

  9. Google Drive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Drive

    Google offers an extension for Google Chrome, Save to Google Drive, that allows users to save web content to Google Drive through a browser action or through the context menu. While documents and images can be saved directly, webpages can be saved in the form of a screenshot (as an image of the visible part of the page or the entire page), or ...