Google Chrome is a great browser for accessing online docs and PDFs. You can easily open and read docs and PDFs by opening the Google Chrome browser extension, which is available for free in the Chrome Web Store. To open a document or PDF in Google Chrome, just type its name into the address bar and hit enter. You can also right-click on a document or PDF to select “Open in new tab.” If you want to save a document or PDF as a file, just click on the “Save As” button at the bottom of the window. If you’re using Google Docs, you can also use the “Share” button at the top of each page to share documents with other people.
Getting Started
By default, when you come across a PDF or other common document file online in Google Chrome, you’ll have to download the file and open it in a separate application.
It’d be much easier to simply view online documents directly in Chrome. To do this, head over to the Docs PDF/PowerPoint Viewer page on the Chrome Extensions site (link below), and click Install to add it to your browser.
Click Install to confirm that you want to install this extension.
Extensions don’t run by default in Incognito mode, so if you’d like to always view documents directly in Chrome, open the Extensions page and check Allow this extension to run in incognito.
Now, when you click a link for a document online, such as a .docx file from Word, it will open in the Google Docs viewer.
These documents usually render in their original full-quality. You can zoom in and out to see exactly what you want, or search within the document. Or, if it doesn’t look correct, you can click the Download link in the top left to save the original document to your computer and open it in Office.
Even complex PDF render very nicely. Do note that Docs will keep downloading the document as you’re reading it, so if you jump to the middle of a document it may look blurry at first but will quickly clear up.
You can even view famous presentations online without opening them in PowerPoint. Note that this will only display the slides themselves, but if you’re looking for information you likely don’t need the slideshow effects anyway.
Adobe Reader Conflicts
If you already have Adobe Acrobat or Adobe Reader installed on your computer, PDF files may open with the Adobe plugin. If you’d prefer to read your PDFs with the Docs PDF Viewer, then you need to disable the Adobe plugin. Enter the following in your Address Bar to open your Chrome Plugins page:
and then click Disable underneath the Adobe Acrobat plugin.
Now your PDFs will always open with the Docs viewer instead.
Performance
Who hasn’t been frustrated by clicking a link to a PDF file, only to have your browser pause for several minutes while Adobe Reader struggles to download and display the file? Google Chrome’s default behavior of simply downloading the files and letting you open them is hardly more helpful.
This extension takes away both of these problems, since it renders the documents on Google’s servers. Most documents opened fairly quickly in our tests, and we were able to read large PDFs only seconds after clicking their link. Also, the Google Docs viewer rendered the documents much better than the HTML version in Google’s cache.
Google Docs did seem to have problem on some files, and we saw error messages on several documents we tried to open. If you encounter this, click the Download link in the top left corner to download the file and view it from your desktop instead.
Conclusion
Google Docs has improved over the years, and now it offers fairly good rendering even on more complex documents. This extension can make your browsing easier, and help documents and PDFs feel more like part of the Internet. And, since the documents are rendered on Google’s servers, it’s often faster to preview large files than to download them to your computer.
Link
Download the Docs PDF/PowerPoint Viewer extension from Google