google apps for desktop download How to Add a Google Shortcut on Your Desktop. This article was written by Jack Lloyd. Jack Lloyd is a Technology Writer and Editor for wikiHow. He has over two years of experience writing and editing technology-related articles. He is technology enthusiast and an English teacher. The wikiHow Tech Team also followed the article's instructions and verified that they work. This article has been viewed 80,695 times. This wikiHow teaches you how to create a desktop shortcut to Google's search page in the Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer, and Safari web browsers. You cannot create a desktop shortcut while using Microsoft Edge. Google retires Chrome App Launcher for Windows, here’s how to launch Google apps from Desktop. Google announced that it discontinued its Chrome App Launcher for Windows Desktop. The program will also be discontinued from Mac, but it will remain as a standard feature of Google’s own Chrome OS. Google’s precise reason for retiring the Chrome App Launcher from Windows and Mac has to do with users opening apps directly from the browser: “We’ve found that users on Windows, Mac, and Linux prefer to launch their apps from within Chrome,” Chrome engineering director Marc Pawliger explains in [a new post to the Chromium blog](Marc Pawliger). “With Chrome’s continued emphasis on simplicity and streamlining browser features, the launcher will be removed from those platforms. It will remain unchanged on Chrome OS.” As Thurrott points out, it is possible that most users are not even aware of the fact that they’re able to run their Google apps directly from the desktop. On the other hand, some users just find it easier to run Google apps within the browser so they don’t have to interrupt their work. How to run Google apps from Windows Desktop. Although Google retired its Chrome App Launcher, you’re still able to run your favorite Chrome apps from the desktop — you just need to perform a simple trick. To make your Google apps accessible from Desktop, do the following: Open a Google app within browser (Google Play Music, Gmail Inbox, Google Photos, basically any service you want) Go to Tools > More tools Go to Add to Desktop, and the following window will appear Rename your app, and check “Mark as window” Click OK, and you’re good to go. Once you save your desired app to Desktop, you’ll be able to use it just like you use other apps in Windows. It will open in its own window separately from Google Chrome, but the user experience will be same as in the browser. You can also pin the shortcut to the taskbar or the Start Menu just as you would with any other regular Windows app. Google Desktop. Google Desktop is a freeware software download filed under desktop enhancement software and made available by Google for Windows. The review for Google Desktop has not been completed yet, but it was tested by an editor here on a PC and a list of features has been compiled; see below. PC desktop and search enhancement. Google Desktop gives you easy access to information on your computer and from the web. It's a desktop search application that provides full text search over your email, computer files, music, photos, chats and web pages that you've viewed. By making your computer searchable, Google Desktop puts your information easily within your reach and frees you from having to manually organize your files, emails and bookmarks. It makes searching your computer as easy as searching the web with Google. Google Desktop doesn't just help you search your computer; it also helps you gather new information from the web with Sidebar, a new desktop feature that shows you your new email, weather and stock information, personalized news and RSS/Atom feeds, and more. Sidebar is personalized automatically, without any manual configuration required (though you can certainly make your own customizations if you want to). How to install Google Desktop. Note: In September 2011, Google announced it would discontinue a number of its products, including Google Desktop. Although Desktop could do several cool things, TBYB! was primarily interested in the Photos gadget, which was a handy way to display a small photo slideshow in the corner of your computer’s screen while working on something else. We also used The Quote gadget, which did the same thing with text. Slideshows are one of the very best ways to advertise to yourself, so we’re sad to see Google Desktop go. Fortunately there are several other ways to automatically deliver a rotating collection of pictures or text. In the last article I introduced the concept of using desktop widgets (Google calls them gadgets) to display ads for yourself. As I said in that article, some widget collections require that you install a “widget engine” to run them. This article will show you how to install and configure the Google widget engine. Google’s widget engine is buried inside a larger application called Google Desktop. Google Desktop is an application whose primary purpose is to index every document, photo and email message on your computer, and make that material searchable for you. Regardless of whether you think making all of your documents searchable is a good idea, I recommend that you consider installing Google Desktop just to get the Google widget engine. It’s that good. You can configure Google Desktop to display a narrow column on the right side of your screen that Google calls this the sidebar. The sidebar is a container for your gadgets. You can add new gadgets to the sidebar, and arrange and configure them to your own preferences. I’ve gotten very used to working with this column on the side of my screen, and find that it’s a nearly ideal place to display my ads. Note that as of this writing Google Desktop requires or Windows 2000 SP3, Windows XP SP2, or Windows Vista. Sorry Mac and Linux folks! Here are the system requirements. Install. Go to http://desktop.google.com. Click Agree and Download . A download dialogue box will open for the file GoogleDesktopSetup.exe. Depending on your browser configuration, it may offer to open the file or save it to disk. Click through the steps to download and open GoogleDesktopSetup.exe . That will start the Google Desktop Installer . If you have some other programs open it may ask you to close them. Go ahead and do that. Next you will see the initial Preferences page. Uncheck all of the boxes below: Google Account features [ ] Index and search my Gmail messages [ ] Save my Google Gadget content and settings Other settings [ ] Set Google as my default search engine in Internet Explorer. (“Save my Google content and settings” enables you to display content you have created on multiple computers. That’s pretty cool and we’ll play with it later, but for now just note where it is and leave it unchecked.) Click Set preferences and continue . On the Enable Advanced Features page click Disable Advanced Features . This completes the install. You will notice that a sidebar has appeared on the right side of your screen. Let’s do a bit of clean-up before we dig into the sidebar. Configure Preferences. On the Google Desktop page in your browser click Desktop Preferences . There are several pages of preferences here, mostly about how you want Google to index the files on your computer. You may or may not want this functionality. Some people swear by it; others have privacy concerns. I’m agnostic about this debate. It doesn’t matter which you choose since we’re just installing Google Desktop as a stepping stone to get Google Sidebar. Note that it’s not indexing your data for everyone on the internet – just you. I do recommend reading through all four pages of Preferences and making decisions about what you want Google to index. Since I didn’t install it for the search functionality I unchecked everything I could. In addition, I specified my C: drive under Don’t Search These Items . The Preference setting that’s important for our purposes is on the Display page. Make sure the Search Box setting is Sidebar . When you have finished going through the Preferences pages click Save Preferences . We’re finished with the browser window for now, so you can close it. Looking ahead. In the next article I’ll describe how to customize the Google Sidebar for your personal advertising campaign. In the meantime I recommend playing around with the gadgets that are already installed in your sidebar to get used to how they work. Start thinking about which ones you want to keep, because you’ll probably want to make room for at least a couple more..
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