I’ve used “Todoists” Icon here on the AOL site, but you get the idea:Ī bit of extra work compared to the old 1 click method google provided us, but at least it can still be done. You can then change the icon on the desktop shortcut: Google Chrome has a default homepage that includes Google Search and a few of the most popular. Enable the home button by switching Show home button on. Below it, you can insert the URL of the website of your choice and then press enter on your keyboard. On the Right side, slide the toggle to turn on the Show home button. Show the home button and type the website. You’ll be directed to the Settings page where you can view additional options. You can convert the PNG to an ICO file here: Click on Customize and control Google Chrome with three vertical points in the top-right corner of the toolbar. Grab the icon from the site you want via. You can change these on the desktop shortcut. The icon is now generate by chrome (which if you make more than one web app, makes them pretty indistinct. It will now act as a dedicated window and have a dedicated “icon stack” on the taskbar (not get mudded in with other chrome windows You can make this slightly better by going to chrome://apps/ in chrome, right clicking on the app and ticking “open as window” This will allow you to choose from a couple of the default icons included in Chrome’s installation. 5 Select 'Change Icon' at the bottom of the Properties menu. but it no longer uses the favicon and it opens in a regular chrome window alongside all other chrome windows Right-click the Google Chrome icon, then click 'Properties'. This does indeed create a shortcut on the desktop. I’m not sure why, it was a great feature. Then select 'Shortcuts' and then select the 'My Shortcuts' customisation option. Unfortunately it looks like this option has been removed/obscured. To do this, select the 'Customise' button in the bottom right hand corner of the Chrome Homepage. One of the things I do in chrome is create an “application shortcut” which basically creates a “webapp” in the sense that you get a desktop shortcut and a browser windows with no address bar/navigation buttons and it’s on Icon/Favicon. Right click on your Google Chrome shortcut on the desktop or in the start menu or on the taskbar. I use a few web apps like Todoist and Dynalist. Step 1: Check your Google Chrome shortcut.
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