Google Chrome gets Bullet physics libray using Native Client. It’s just a simple demonstration app that you can download from the Chrome Web Store. As you can see above, it’s a ramp. Native Client is designed to be backward-compatible.For example, applications developed with the pepper_37 bundle can run in Chrome 37, Chrome 38, etc. Run naclsdk with the update command to download recommended bundles, including the current “stable” bundle.
Open in Chrome™ addon gives you the ability to open any link in a Google Chrome browser from Firefox.
Note 1: (v0.1.2) after installing the addon, you need to connect it with native applications (i.e. Chrome) on your machine. In order to make this connection, a separate patch is provided in GitHub. Please download and install this patch from: https://github.com/alexmarcoo/open-in-native-client/releases
Follow the instruction in the above GitHub page to download and install the related patch to your system. After installing, the 'Open in Chrome™' addon in your Firefox browser can communicate with Google Chrome on your machine (Window, Linux or Mac).
Note 2: before using the addon, please open the option's page and make sure the path to Chrome is correct based on your Operating System. For example, the path to Google Chrome in Window 10 is: C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe
Please adjust this path if you have Mac or Linux. Next, please follow the below steps to open desired links in Google Chrome.
a. right click on any link and then click on the Open link in Chrome (from the context menu).
b. you can choose to open the window in private (incognito) or normal mode (see addon's options page).
c. It captures the link from any text content within the page (i.e. for those links that are not hyperlinked).
d. you can set the Chrome path in your machine from the options page.
Note 3: in order to report any Bug, please fill the Bug report form in the addon's Homepage.
Note 1: (v0.1.2) after installing the addon, you need to connect it with native applications (i.e. Chrome) on your machine. In order to make this connection, a separate patch is provided in GitHub. Please download and install this patch from: https://github.com/alexmarcoo/open-in-native-client/releases
Follow the instruction in the above GitHub page to download and install the related patch to your system. After installing, the 'Open in Chrome™' addon in your Firefox browser can communicate with Google Chrome on your machine (Window, Linux or Mac).
Note 2: before using the addon, please open the option's page and make sure the path to Chrome is correct based on your Operating System. For example, the path to Google Chrome in Window 10 is: C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe
Please adjust this path if you have Mac or Linux. Next, please follow the below steps to open desired links in Google Chrome.
a. right click on any link and then click on the Open link in Chrome (from the context menu).
b. you can choose to open the window in private (incognito) or normal mode (see addon's options page).
c. It captures the link from any text content within the page (i.e. for those links that are not hyperlinked).
d. you can set the Chrome path in your machine from the options page.
Note 3: in order to report any Bug, please fill the Bug report form in the addon's Homepage.
Open in Chrome™ addon gives you the ability to open any link in a Google Chrome browser from Opera. Note 1: after installing the addon, you need to connect it with native applications (i.e. Chrome) on your machine. In order to make this connection, a separate patch is provided in GitHub. What is the Google Chrome Native Client? Native Client is an open-source technology that allows you to build web applications that seamlessly execute native compiled code inside the browser. This Google Code project is for maintaining the Native Client implementation, including compiler and browser support. Easily open desired links in VLC media player. Issue 7770001: Copy Mark Seaborn from the Native Client authors file to the Chromium authors (Closed).
Native Client finally went stable in Google Chrome 14. Its potential is impressive, allowing native C code to run inside the Chrome browser and offer app performance that truly rivals that of traditional desktop programs.
![Chrome Chrome](/uploads/1/2/5/1/125189685/415467528.png)
![Patch Patch](/uploads/1/2/5/1/125189685/664993657.jpg)
But there aren’t too many apps or games in the Chrome Web Store that take advantage of Chrome’s new secret sauce. That may change as key libraries get Native Client ports — libraries like the ubiquitous Bullet Physics.
You may never have heard of Bullet Physics before, but it’s literally everywhere. It’s been used in countless games — like Android’s Riptide GP, Hydro Thunder for Xbox, and just about every Pixar title — and animated films from Dreamworks including Megamind to Shrek 3D. It’s also used by industry-leading apps like 3DMark 11, Cinema 4D 12, and Lightwave CORE.
Now, Bullet Physics has arrived for Google Chrome.
For the time being, it’s just a simple demonstration app that you can download from the Chrome Web Store. As you can see above, it’s a ramp, tennis ball, and a stack of wooden crates. Use your mouse’s scroll wheel to zoom in and out and click to grab objects and move (or fling) them around. There’s one caveat: though the Native Client is part of Chrome 14, this particular app requires Chrome 15 or better.
Even on my middling, business-class PC the demo was extremely responsive. Now all we need is for some developers to take notice and get their games ported to Native Client. Speaking of which, does anyone know what ever became of that Lego Star Wars game Google teased us with when they first showed off the Chrome Web Store?
Native Client Patch For Firefox
More at Chrome Web Store