Thirtydot is correct, run Chrome with the --disable-extensions command-line option to disable extensions. Technically, it doesn’t so much disable all the extensions as much as hide them so that Chrome thinks that none are installed, so this won’t help in your particular case. T_b_b, since you cannot disable extensions in-browser and the command-line argument hides all extensions, what you want to do is to manually disable them. Open your then open the file Preferences in a text-editor. Now scroll down to the line starting the settings blocks: 'settings': { Each of the extensions will have its own block inside the settings block. To disable them, change their states to 0: 'state': 1 To simplify things, just do a search for all lines containing 'state': 1 and change them to 'state': 0.
@studgeek, then you are missing something or modifying it while Chrome is still running (it reverts the setting when you exit) because this is how Chrome determines which extensions are enabled or disabled, and if didn’t work, then you would have to re-enable/disable everything each time you run it (when running normally), but clearly you don’t; it remembers which are enabled or disabled. Also, make sure you are taking extra care with things like commas because a missing or extra one will render the JSON syntax invalid which causes Chrome to ignore the file. Free rpg online games for mac. – May 11 '14 at 2:19 •. I tried all the suggestions for launching Chrome with plugins, no plugins, incognito and so forth.
Click on finish, once done. In Google Chrome the same can be done with the extensions command. The process of managing add-ons is very easy.
Nothing worked. Even the menus launch a Chrome page, so if Chrome gives you the 'Aw Snap' message, it really means - Aw Snap! You can't even get to the tools and settings. I did a Ctrl+ Alt+ Del and found chrome.exe in the task manager.
Then I forced it closed, Chrome finally came up again. It has something to do with syncing your Gmail account when Chrome launches: if that is failing, then Chrome turns into Chris Rock.