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>
+<h3 id="getting_certs">Installing Certificates</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>
"C,," -n -i " for both the MIT CA and (if you want it) the CSAIL CA.</p>
<!--what do you pass as argumets exactly? -->
-<h3><a name="using_certs">Using Certificates</a></h3>
+<h3 id="using_certs">Using Certificates</h3>
<p>Here's the last key to the puzzle: Chrome on Linux currently lacks a UI for selecting a certificate, so run it with the --auto-ssl-client-auth flag.<p>
To do this by default in Gnome, you want to edit both Preferred Applications and the Main Menu entry
this way links you click on outside of Chrome open this way. (Gnome Do and similar pull their data from Main Menu, among other places.)