Normally, to update Chrome, you go to the Settings menu (either 3 verticle dots in Material Design or hamburger icon), click on Help and About Google Chrome.
Or just simply go to Chrome://help from the address bar.
Then, when you are at the Help page, the update will start automatically if it detects any updates available.
But if this process didn’t go well and Chrome browser keeps reverting to the old version after the restart, here is how you can do it manually.
First of all, go to Google Chrome’s Download Page and download the Chrome on your computer.
Then, shut down all Chrome instances on your computer and launch the Chrome setup file you just downloaded. It will download the latest Chrome package from Google first and install it on your computer.
Once installed, restart Chrome, and you will see the latest Chrome running instead of the old version.
If using Copilot right from the Taskbar isn't your thing, you should disable it. Even…
In an environment where standardizing things does matter, setting default fonts in Microsoft Office apps…
Wake-On-LAN is a networking standard that lets you wake up a computer from either a…
First of all, this is not to bypass a PDF file that requires a password…
Microsoft has been lurking about the idea of placing the Outlook navigation bar to the…
One colleague came up to me the other day asking me to take look at…