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September 2nd, 2008

Google Chrome: Steal this browser

Posted by Ed Burnette @ 11:18 am

Categories: Community, General, Google, Microsoft, Web Browsers

Tags: Google Inc., Web Browser, Web Browsers, Internet, Ed Burnette

In Focus » See more posts on: Google Chrome

chrome200.pngGoogle announced a new web browser today called Chrome. Analysts who wonder if this spells “doom” for Firefox, or if it’s an “IE killer” are missing the point. Like Gears, Chrome is Google’s latest attempt to lead by example, and push the envelope of the web experience.

[ Read: Google bets future on improving Client, Connectivity, and Cloud ]

First of all, Chrome is a new browser but not a new rendering engine. What’s the difference? A rendering engine just draws words and graphics to a rectangle on the screen. A web browser is all the stuff around that rectangle including menus, tabs, favorites, searching, and so forth. Rendering engines are hard, quirky, and tedious, so for Chrome Google picked the WebKit engine used by Safari, Adobe AIR, iPhone, and Android instead of writing their own. Web developers will be relieved to know that they don’t have to worry about yet another engine to target.

So what is Chrome and why should you care? Chrome puts together a number of new and old ideas for browser usability, stability, and performance under one open source roof. By giving away the code, Google is practically begging other browser makers (including the top two–Microsoft and Mozilla) to take pieces from their browser and incorporate them into their own wares.

contribution.png

As the cute comic book introduction to Chrome says, Google’s goal is to “Keep moving the web forward”. Like Gears, I expect Chrome to be a platform for experimentation. I don’t expect it to gain any significant market share on its own. That’s not its goal. However I do hope that others will take Google up on the offer to use some of the ideas it demonstrates.

There are two advances in particular that make Chrome interesting:

  1. Multi-process browsing. Most browsers up to now have run as one process containing multiple threads, but Chrome is a bunch of cooperating processes. Think of threads as people and processes as houses the people can live in. If you put a bunch of people in one house, and one of them gets sick then everybody else in the house might catch it too. But if everybody gets their own house, that’s much less likely to happen. One thing operating systems are really good at is keeping processes separated. So the hope is that tabs and windows in Chrome will be unable to affect each other negatively.
  2. First class tabs. Unlike Firefox or IE7, Chrome puts the tabs on top of the browser window above the address bar that shows the page URL. In fact some apps may not need an address bar. Tim Burners Lee always envisioned the URL as something that would be hidden from the user, so I think we’ll see more of that. As part of this behavior, you’ll be able to drag a tab out of one window and into another. I’ve been looking forward to that feature for a long time, as I tend to open up so many tabs I can’t read their titles any more.

Unless you’re a web developer or like living on the bleeding edge, I don’t recommend you rush out and download Chrome yourself. The initial version will have plenty of rough edges that will send you running back to your old standbys. But if you want a glimpse of what webtops might look like in a few years, check out Google’s Chrome-plated vision.

Ed BurnetteEd Burnette is a professional developer and author of several articles and books about computing including Hello, Android: Introducing Google's Mobile Development Platform, 2nd Edition. For disclosure of Ed's industry affiliations, click here or to view his full profile click here.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 15 Talkback(s)
RE: Google Chrome: Steal this browser
I installed it, used it for about 1 hour and removed it urgently.
I have serious doubts about privacy matters!!!... (Read the rest)
Posted by: watermana Posted on: 09/04/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Memory Usage not commendable  saichand | 09/02/08
I think you missed the point...  aseitz | 09/02/08
Great! Give me that browser! I want to consume all my RAM  markbn | 09/02/08
RE: Google Chrome: Steal this browser  JGNR | 09/02/08
RE: Google Chrome: Steal this browser  timothyblake | 09/02/08
RE: Google Chrome: Steal this browser  sevenless | 09/02/08
RE: Google Chrome: Steal this browser  AndyFinkle | 09/02/08
RE: Google Chrome: Steal this browser  jcd-zdnet@... | 09/02/08
Java for Chrome browser  jcd-zdnet@... | 09/02/08
Yup there's a real market out there.  tonymcs@... | 09/02/08
Running under WINE?  daboochmeister | 09/03/08
Google Chrome? NEVER!  RS9 | 09/03/08
I'm sure the Chinese people are most thankful  mhenriday | 09/03/08
RE: Google Chrome: Steal this browser  sma_97 | 09/03/08
RE: Google Chrome: Steal this browser  watermana | 09/04/08

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