Window Snap in Chrome OS Has a Useful Hidden Extra



Window Snap in Chrome OS Has a Useful Hidden Extra

Time Saving Tips — We Love 'Em! The 'window snap' feature in Chrome OS is super handy and lets us view two apps/browser pages side-by-side — but have you discovered a little-known extra that makes using it a little more awesome? Reader Jonathan A. came upon the nifty feature himself recently. Unsure of whether it was new he mailed in to tell us about it. I'm glad he did. Despite this useful extra being part of Chrome OS for a good few months I had never noticed it before. A Hidden Window Snap Power Up Most of you reading this will be very familiar with how window snapping works in Chrome OS: you drag an app to an edge of the screen ( or shunt it using a keyboard shortcut ) and the window instantly resizes itself to fill that half of the display. It certainly makes being productive easier being able to see two things side-by-side, be it reading a Wikipedia article while writing an essay or watching a looping playlist of cat videos  while editing photos in Polarr.

Read full article from Window Snap in Chrome OS Has a Useful Hidden Extra


No comments:

Post a Comment

Labels

Algorithm (219) Lucene (130) LeetCode (97) Database (36) Data Structure (33) text mining (28) Solr (27) java (27) Mathematical Algorithm (26) Difficult Algorithm (25) Logic Thinking (23) Puzzles (23) Bit Algorithms (22) Math (21) List (20) Dynamic Programming (19) Linux (19) Tree (18) Machine Learning (15) EPI (11) Queue (11) Smart Algorithm (11) Operating System (9) Java Basic (8) Recursive Algorithm (8) Stack (8) Eclipse (7) Scala (7) Tika (7) J2EE (6) Monitoring (6) Trie (6) Concurrency (5) Geometry Algorithm (5) Greedy Algorithm (5) Mahout (5) MySQL (5) xpost (5) C (4) Interview (4) Vi (4) regular expression (4) to-do (4) C++ (3) Chrome (3) Divide and Conquer (3) Graph Algorithm (3) Permutation (3) Powershell (3) Random (3) Segment Tree (3) UIMA (3) Union-Find (3) Video (3) Virtualization (3) Windows (3) XML (3) Advanced Data Structure (2) Android (2) Bash (2) Classic Algorithm (2) Debugging (2) Design Pattern (2) Google (2) Hadoop (2) Java Collections (2) Markov Chains (2) Probabilities (2) Shell (2) Site (2) Web Development (2) Workplace (2) angularjs (2) .Net (1) Amazon Interview (1) Android Studio (1) Array (1) Boilerpipe (1) Book Notes (1) ChromeOS (1) Chromebook (1) Codility (1) Desgin (1) Design (1) Divide and Conqure (1) GAE (1) Google Interview (1) Great Stuff (1) Hash (1) High Tech Companies (1) Improving (1) LifeTips (1) Maven (1) Network (1) Performance (1) Programming (1) Resources (1) Sampling (1) Sed (1) Smart Thinking (1) Sort (1) Spark (1) Stanford NLP (1) System Design (1) Trove (1) VIP (1) tools (1)

Popular Posts