-<p>So, you want to run Chrome (or Chromium), but you're annoyed by the lack of
-client certificate authentication on Linux. Turns out, this is relatively easy
-to solve, there's just no UI for it as of yet. (As of 11/13/2009.) (Note: I'm doing this running the daily build from the chromium-daily ppa on Launchpad - if you're running Debian or Ubuntu, you can add "deb http://ppa.launchpad.net/chromium-daily/ppa/ubuntu karmic main" to your
-/etc/apt/sources.list if you want to run this. It may work on the official
-Google build as well, I'm not sure.)</p>
+<h3>I can visit some page in firefox and it just requests a certificate. How do I get that to work on Google Chome?</h3>
+<p>So, you want to run Chrome (or Chromium), but you're annoyed by the lack of client certificate authentication on Linux.
+Turns out, this is relatively easy to solve, there's just no GUI for it as of yet. (As of 12/3/2009.)
+As far as I know, this only works with the daily build from the chromium-daily ppa on Launchpad.
+<small>It might work on the official chrome build, if it works, please tell us.</small>
+if you're running Debian or Ubuntu, you can add "deb http://ppa.launchpad.net/chromium-daily/ppa/ubuntu karmic main" to your
+/etc/apt/sources.list and then apt-get update
+</p>
+<h3><a name="getting_certs">Installing Certificates</a></h3>
+<p> The simplest thing to do is go to the <a href="https://ca.mit.edu/ca/">usual web interface</a> and follow the instructions to install certs normally.
+You may also want the <a href="http://ca.csail.mit.edu/cacert">CSAIL CA</a> (specifically, the Master CA).
+If this works, you should be able to skip to telling chrome to<a href="#using_certs">use certtificate by default</a>