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That search defaults to Google, naturally-but you can change that fairly quickly if you’d like. (You can also whitelist entire sites like-YouTube and Twitch-where you always want HTML5 videos to play.) Change the omnibox search engineīy default, Chrome’s omnibox acts as both a URL bar and search. Install it, enable it, and HTML5 videos will only play if you choose to run them by clicking the big Play icon this extension slaps on them.
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That’s where the handy Disable HTML5 Autoplay extension comes in.
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Many videos are moving to HTML5, however, especially as restrictions on Flash increase. The click-to-play message you’ll see when Chrome blocks Flash content. Now, whenever there’s a Flash element on a page it’ll be blocked unless you right-click on it and allow it to play. Scroll down to the Flash portion and select Block sites from running Flash. Once again, we’re heading to Settings > Show advanced settings > Content settings… (in the Privacy section). There’s a workaround, though it takes a couple of steps. Yay!Ĭhrome doesn’t include an option that disables auto-playing videos by default. Boo! But fear not, as Chrome is one of the few major Windows apps with fairly useful UI scaling options of its own. Scale the interfaceĬhrome doesn’t play nice with Windows’ default interface scaling, which sucks when you’re browsing on a display with an exceptionally high or exceptionally low resolution as it means on-screen elements can look too small or too large, respectively. If you want to blacklist the prompts but allow specific sites access, both the Location and Notification sections feature a Manage Exceptions button that allow you to whitelist handpicked pages. The Do not allow any site to track your physical location option does the same for location prompts, but be warned that some websites may not behave as intended if you don’t share your whereabouts. Simply select the Do not allow any site to show notifications option to ban those pesky prompts. You’re looking for the Location and Notifications options in the menu that appears. Click Show advanced settings at the bottom, then the Content settings button in the Privacy section. IDGĬlick the three vertical dots in Chrome’s upper right-hand corner to open the browser’s options, then select Settings. That’s a good thing! But it gets awfully annoying, awfully fast as you wander across the vast expanse of the web, especially if your answer is a uniform “lolnope.” Fortunately you can tell Chrome to quit bugging you with these prompts by automatically declining the requests. Chrome asks permission before it allows websites to access your location or push you notifications.
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