Reading PDFs in your browser, instead of downloading them and reading them in an app like Preview, is a nice convenience. But Safari is the only major Mac browser that has a read-PDFs-in-the-browser option turned on by default … Chrome has the same feature, but it’s disabled by default; [here’s] how easy it is to enable it:
Type about:plugins in the Chrome omnibox [also known as the address field]. Looking through the list of plugins, you should see a disabled one called Chrome PDF Viewer; click Enable under it.
You should now be able to view PDFs in Chrome. The viewer is very fast. Resizing controls are available in the bottom-right corner of the browser window. Currently, there’s no loading indicator for PDFs; if you click on a large one, you might think the tab is frozen, but it’s probably just still waiting for the PDF to finish downloading.
The plugin does have a few rough edges; occasional PDFs (particularly those with restrictions on printing, copying, and so forth) will not display properly. The vast majority should, however, show up just fine. This plugin doesn’t do much beyond display PDFs, so you’ll still probably want Preview or Adobe Acrobat for more intense PDF work. But for basic viewing, the built-in viewer is really handy.
Republished Article by Whitson Gordon, Macworld.com