![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgwJCXwVPVcHIDeX6KuWRr7cVEFdZyN-fH_93dghcuY6PScsmb7F9h4-sKEoLWx3VrcLlNBYDAnilVRh7EiK7R_B6MM0InxwQIksoiRAaP0UTJe6RLshzZNwsF20qVSQ__MHg_rQlzecBW0/s200/chromeicon.jpg)
Alternatively, you can now download installation packages for a stable version of Google Chrome for Linux. Packages are available in 32-bit and 64-bit versions of Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora and openSUSE. Chrome is also available in the Ubuntu canonical repository.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhSIe2W5X2oSJxHXVFokQ6lJwMIPeNIsFlcbI4YFHD1jeciTHBLkc2dRFdU1RzXRxFBjORoVUqN_iqveM8yu0scSin3Y_kbzhIcX9lNcCrvQKNnd7VuZZ7uJKc_HxR6HpnyTcO2bCaJ4lfQ/s400/chromeshot.png)
I installed the 64-bit version of Chrome on Xubuntu and it certainly appears to be very fast. I have yet to attempt all my usual web-based tasks on Chrome, but what I have tried has worked well. The growing collection of extensions for Chrome mean that I may be in a position to use it as my main browser rather than Firefox, although I may wait and see what the upcoming version 4 of Firefox has to offer.
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