Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Chrome Wireless Networking Communications Google Movies Network Networking Operating Systems Software Television The Internet News Entertainment Hardware Technology

Google Cast Is Now Baked Into Chrome, No Extension Needed (trustedreviews.com) 93

An anonymous reader writes: The Google Chrome 51 browser now includes a built-in 'Cast' option within the drop-down settings menu, which can also be accessed from right clicking in a tab. This will then cast the current tab to the appropriate TV or monitor. Previously, if you wanted to cast content from your computer to your Chromecast-equipped display, you needed to download a Chrome extension. Along with the new changes, Google has removed the ability to tweak settings for resolution, bitrate, and quality when casting a tab, so Chrome itself will now control such parameters automatically. Chrome 51 is now available as a stable version, and the Cast option should be rolling out to users now. This casting ability will also be baked into Chrome OS. The report points out several new related features coming in Chrome 52, such as the ability to cast to Hangouts. You will be able to push Chrome tabs to your contacts within an open video Hangout, which may be useful for remote meetings. In addition, the Cast to Hangouts feature will also retrieve your calendar information to find such scheduled Hangout meetings to make quick sharing easier.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Google Cast Is Now Baked Into Chrome, No Extension Needed

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward

    A browser doesn't need to be a calculator, a word processor, a typing instructor, a device manager, etc.

    It also doesn't need spyware or curb feelers.

    • by JoeMerchant ( 803320 ) on Monday July 04, 2016 @09:29PM (#52445787)

      A browser doesn't need to be a calculator, a word processor, a typing instructor, a device manager, etc.

      It also doesn't need spyware or curb feelers.

      Tell that to Microsoft Windows 10.

    • by viperidaenz ( 2515578 ) on Monday July 04, 2016 @10:31PM (#52445951)

      A browser needs to be able to render web pages.
      Why should it only be able to render it to the physically attached screen?

      • by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 04, 2016 @11:49PM (#52446159)
        A browser should NOT be rendering to any screen, it calls system API's to do that on its behalf. If you want to have it render to something other than the mainscreen then install drivers or addins to do it for you. system bloat like this makes for stability and security nightmares as soon you are supporting a myriad of different remote protocols, functionality and stuff that has fuck all to do with what a web browser is meant to do.
        • by xbytor ( 215790 )

          system bloat like this makes for stability and security nightmares

          So Chrome is now chase Firefox...

    • by mcrbids ( 148650 )

      A browser cell phone doesn't need to be a calculator, a word processor, a typing instructor, a device manager, etc.

      A browser/cell phone/Desktop Environment/etc doesn't need to be anything but what people want it to be. I want my cell phone to be a calculator, word processor, typing instructor, etc. And I'm perfectly happy with my browser extensions that share screens and do other stuff that is useful.

      People don't buy minimalism, they buy features.

  • Junk Included (Score:3, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 04, 2016 @09:21PM (#52445771)

    More reasons for people to stop and think: move back to FF, or to a third-party (probably FF fork) alternative. More code = less secure. Chrome is already the slowest and most painful of the bunch and only growing. This reminds one of the time FF wanted to include a security suite for CCTV cameras.

    • More reasons for people to stop and think: move back to FF

      One piece of proprietary junk was not the reason we left FF. A continued trend of ignoring users with every new release was.

      But I do like you suggestion. The alternatives are looking quite good, and I'm happy with how Pale Moon performs on my system.

    • by fnj ( 64210 )

      More reasons for people to stop and think: move back to FF

      BWAHAHAHA! You want to move TO Firefox to REDUCE bloat and junk? Are you crazy?

  • Will it cast to a miracast supported device like a Roku or only to a chromecast supported device? My Nexus 6P will only cast to the latter when it comes out of the box. You have to root the phone to restore the miracast functionality.
    • Will it cast to a miracast supported device like a Roku or only to a chromecast supported device? My Nexus 6P will only cast to the latter when it comes out of the box. You have to root the phone to restore the miracast functionality.

      I'm having the same experience with Nexus 5x - very ChromeCastCentric, disappointing, really - it only took them 10 years to turn openly evil.

  • They would get a right kicking on slashdot for implementing another non-relevant feature for the masses!

    On another note, people here don't seem to realise that browsers are super hard and uber complex, and approaching the territory of operating systems. And mozilla in this battle is a tiny non-profit charity working for the good of the masses (first with getting everyone to care about standards and w3c against IE, and now fighting for privacy and developing the latest HTML5 / CSS4/ ES6 standards) and trying

    • They would get a right kicking on slashdot for implementing another non-relevant feature for the masses!

      What makes you think Chrome won't? The only two upmodded comments right now is a comment on how to disable it, and one titled BLOAT.
      Slashdot is an equal opportunity hater on useless crap. Your pet project is not being treated any differently.

      On another note, people here don't seem to realise that browsers are super hard and uber complex, and approaching the territory of operating systems.

      Indeed. Complexity is driven by the standard requirements. .... So which standard requires that I be able to "cast" my tab to a proprietary device hooked to a TV? Which standard requires my browser save my tabs via a proprietary service run by a 3rd party which has no b

    • On another note, people here don't seem to realise that browsers are super hard and uber complex, and approaching the territory of operating systems

      There is more code in Chrome than in the entire FreeBSD base system. Slightly less than in the FreeBSD base system plus X.org. They long since passed the complexity of operating systems.

    • And if you're still of those complaining about the australis UI and using that as excuse for people to switch to Pale Moon - please, go and install "Classic Theme Restorer [mozilla.org]" like the rest of us.

      Been there, done that, turned my nose up at the T-shirt. Classic Theme Restorer may give back access to old themes, but the post-Australis browser configuration experience sucks balls. THAT is why I switched to Pale Moon. Plus, I wanted to be part of the message to Mozilla that they need to stop ignoring the desires of the majority of their user base if they want to maintain relevance and grow their market share. Australis was just the last 'Fuck You' that came my way from Mozilla before I sent back one of

      • The 'fuck you' was removal of the checkbox to disable javascript, and the one to disable pictures.
        *That* sucks donkey balls, even if it's something you'd very rarely use ; maybe you're referring in part to that?
        If I want to "break" the web it's my call and I also know about Firefox profiles, even running two of them concurrently.
        Australis is rather benign, since you can have a title bar, a menu bar and remove unwanted icons.

    • "mozilla...is a tiny non-profit charity"

      Mozilla is not tiny AT ALL, and it is an absolute wonder how development of a web browser and a maintenance-mode email client cost $317 million per year, or require a $261 million (and growing) endowment. From the Mozilla Foundation's 2014 Annual Report:

      $261 million - Net Unrestricted Assets at the end of year

      $329 million - Net Unrestricted Revenue over the year
      $317 million - Total Expenses over the year

      Expense include:
      $212 million - Software Development
      $

      • Thanks for the informative comment.
        It may seem like a lot, but it pales in comparison with the likes of Google, Microsoft, and Apple.

        As I said, they have virtually limitless amount of resource and money to develop their browsers, Mozilla don't.
        And as I and others have pointed out, browsers are probably far more complicated than operating systems these days, and likely the most complex software ever created!

        To be honest, considering how much Mozilla and Opera have done for the web and developing the latest s

  • I don't use Hangouts, but 51.0.2704 has an option "Enable casting to cloud based services like Google Hangouts"

  • FUCKING BLOAT. that is all
    • Yes, More bloat on the Browser and LESS functionality. From the summary:

      Along with the new changes, Google has removed the ability to tweak settings for resolution, bitrate, and quality when casting a tab

      I used to use the GoogleCast beta add-on, so I had even more finegrained control over parameters, including acceptable delay/jitter.

      Not that is gone.

      Kraptastic!

    • by Threni ( 635302 )

      Use a different browser then. Beggers don't call the shots.

  • how to disable (Score:5, Informative)

    by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Monday July 04, 2016 @11:23PM (#52446117)

    you can disable it. it's listed as "Media Router" on the flags page: chrome://flags#media-router

    • You shouldn't have to disable it. It shouldn't even be here to begin with.

    • If it has to exist at all, you should have to ENable it if you at all care for it.

      Having to disable something always feels like a waiter asking me why I complain about a fly in the soup since I could simply remove it if I don't like it.

  • Chrome on Android does not support Adblock so I use Firefox on Android.

    If I use Firefox on Android I might as well use it on Windows and Linux.

    So I stopped using Chrome.

    • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

      If you want and ad blocking Chrome you have the option of using #NoChromo or, if you have a Snapdragon SoC, a CAF Chromium build like RSBrowser.
      CAF Chromium has the added bonus of being significantly faster than vanilla Chrome.

  • so nice. thanks
  • I use Chrome to, oddly enough, browse the internet on a seemingly leaner browser. Are there any slimmed down versions of Chrome that don't include Chromecasting or Hangouts or Facebook or etc., etc. I'm looking for a lean 64-bit build of Chrome.
    • Are there any slimmed down versions of Chrome that don't include Chromecasting or Hangouts or Facebook or etc., etc. I'm looking for a lean 64-bit build of Chrome.

      Err, well as far as I've checked my version of Chrome doesn't "include Facebook" and in fact I needed to install an extension to include Hangouts, but if you're looking for a version of Chrome without the proprietary bits and blobs (which presumably includes this, although I could be wrong), you should just use Chromium.

      Failing that, as others ha

      • While your version of Chrome doesn't "include Facebook", there are other advertised-as 'slim' Chrome builds that have integrated functions that are not extensions one can disable similarly to this one.
        I'll have to evaluate the difference between Chromium and Chrome as I'd just assumed one was an eventual stepping stone to the other with all these unwanted bits included. Thanks for the suggestion!

You are always doing something marginal when the boss drops by your desk.

Working...