| Monday, September 1 2008 |

Google plans to launch its very own web-browser software in competition to Microsoft Internet Explorer called Google Chrome. The new browser according to entries at the official Google blog suggest the driving force behind the browser is to provide value-added features to its users, at the same time, help drive innovation on the web. It is claimed that the browser is tailored to give the most out of common tasks on the internet as a web-browser has become a very significant component of the connected PC.
The browser designed to be streamlined and simple for you to accomplish tasks quickly and easily by offering enhanced address-bar features and other elements that are very different from those on other browsers. The product will be open-source. Says the blog post "To most people, it isn't the browser that matters. It's only a tool to run the important stuff -- the pages, sites and applications that make up the web. Like the classic Google homepage, Google Chrome is clean and fast. It gets out of your way and gets you where you want to go."
Google released a comic book explaining its design approach towards the web-browser, it can be read here. Under the hood, Google claims the browser to have what it takes to run complex web-applications any by keeping each browser tab in its "sandbox", the probability of a web-application crash on one tab affecting other tabs is eradicated. A beta version of this browser software would be released in over 100 countries tomorrow, September the 2nd.
Sources: The Wall Street Journal, Official Google Blog
The browser designed to be streamlined and simple for you to accomplish tasks quickly and easily by offering enhanced address-bar features and other elements that are very different from those on other browsers. The product will be open-source. Says the blog post "To most people, it isn't the browser that matters. It's only a tool to run the important stuff -- the pages, sites and applications that make up the web. Like the classic Google homepage, Google Chrome is clean and fast. It gets out of your way and gets you where you want to go."
Google released a comic book explaining its design approach towards the web-browser, it can be read here. Under the hood, Google claims the browser to have what it takes to run complex web-applications any by keeping each browser tab in its "sandbox", the probability of a web-application crash on one tab affecting other tabs is eradicated. A beta version of this browser software would be released in over 100 countries tomorrow, September the 2nd.
Sources: The Wall Street Journal, Official Google Blog
User comments
oh hell no, google is no underdog. Google is a massive, massive player in the industry.
by: alexp999Goobuntu (or is it googuntu) is already invented and all.. in fact its what google employees run and also what the google servers run on.. its just not released to the public yet.
Maybe this is the next step towards, the Google OS. Wonder when it will be released. its the 2nd sept here now! :p
And now even gizmodo and such apparantely use 'googleapis.com' to run their comment system, meaning google can nicely track what you say and think in comments on sites, or at the very least where and when you comment, I think it's all going a bit too far for my liking.
Of course not to be outdone there's also 'yahooapis'..
(that was tongue-in-cheek because techpowerup uses yahooapis.com for something or other it seems)
Of course not to be outdone there's also 'yahooapis'..
(that was tongue-in-cheek because techpowerup uses yahooapis.com for something or other it seems)
Its been this way on all my PCs from my Socket A to this machine. Ive only recently started using a plugin and thats Adblock.
PP Mguire: my first load up can be slow on my media PC (1GB ram on vista w/ aero :P), but its fast and snappy on my other ones. You got any plugins that could cause it?
Heres an article i found featuring some screenshots looks ok
http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/software/soa/Google-s-Chrome-browser-Screenshots/0,130061733,339291738,00.htm
http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/software/soa/Google-s-Chrome-browser-Screenshots/0,130061733,339291738,00.htm
Very Web 2.0 IMO. I see great things for this company.
google needs to slow down.. i think they are just taking it to far.
by: Conti027They need to speed up! Or they might get behind. They want to become the next Apple. (Ironically, Apple has a lower stock value than Google)
google needs to slow down.. i think they are just taking it to far.
by: spacejunkyFirefox 2's built in address bar suggestion is an exact rip-off of google desktop search.
What Google inspired features? because it defaults to Google search???
by: mluppleKeep in mind the default page for Firefox is Google search. Coincidence? I think not.
Firefox 2's built in address bar suggestion is an exact rip-off of google desktop search.
by: PVTCaboose1337The individual stock value doesn't matter. What matters is the overall combined value.
(Ironically, Apple has a lower stock value than Google)
by: mluppleI have heard that many times, but I guess I have neglected to listen. Well in that case, Google's percentage grown in the past 3 years has been bigger than Apple's.
The individual stock value doesn't matter. What matters is the overall combined value.
by: PVTCaboose1337no thats the last thing i want to see Google do. they were fine as a search engine maybe alittle more.
They need to speed up! Or they might get behind. They want to become the next Apple. (Ironically, Apple has a lower stock value than Google)
by: PP Mguirehave firefox load up with windows, it won't take as long
Defragged SATAII HD after fresh install and FF still takes forever to first load up. If i close it and go back to it its fine.
Meh, unimpressed. I have FF exactly where I want it to be for a browser. I'll stick with it for now.
TBH, google chrome's organisation of windows and address bar is perfectly obvious. I have often wondered why other "tabbed" browsers make such a hash of it. After trying IE7, I switched back to IE6. Why? Because by "shift clicking" on a link, I get a new "tab" on the taskbar managed through task manager which is 100% more intuitive and 100% more robust.
PS. There are a lot of naysayers, and anti-change protesters in this thread. :laugh: Give it a go. PS. google.com/chrome is still dead at 10:00 GMT
I thought the screenshot showing your favourite 9 websites was quite fun. Just like a modern TV channel browser.
No news yet if this will be released on Windows only, or Linux + other OS, on launch.
PS. There are a lot of naysayers, and anti-change protesters in this thread. :laugh: Give it a go. PS. google.com/chrome is still dead at 10:00 GMT
I thought the screenshot showing your favourite 9 websites was quite fun. Just like a modern TV channel browser.
No news yet if this will be released on Windows only, or Linux + other OS, on launch.
I have my FF customized exactly how i want it. iGoogle is my homepage i see some news headlines, my to-do list, weather and calender as soon as i open the browser. If Chrome has the same sort of customization then i may give it a go.
I think this is a great idea for the uneducated and those that use a lot of Google products. However, I feel as if it's not targeted at me, the enthusiast. I love the simplicity, which is a great feature for those learning or scared of the internet. It'll help making web browsing easier, but at the same time (which some many look at monopolising) it'll also make people(/nubs) think that Google is the internet, a lot like AOL but on a much bigger scale - which is exactly what Google want.
From an enthusiastic point of view, I'm intrigued by it, and I'll definitely give it a shot in the mouth as I may be able to replace FF on my Dad's PC with this, depending on how the underlying features are - for example, how secure it is. Will we be able to change features the same way we can with FF?
Looking forward to it.
From an enthusiastic point of view, I'm intrigued by it, and I'll definitely give it a shot in the mouth as I may be able to replace FF on my Dad's PC with this, depending on how the underlying features are - for example, how secure it is. Will we be able to change features the same way we can with FF?
Looking forward to it.
Flash cookies using / data mining Google and Adobe can kiss my ass:

Yeah, IT LOOKS LIKE... :cool:
Take a look at your folder C:documents and settingsUSERNAMEapplication datamacromediaflashplayer
I have deleted my Google account some days ago.

I donīt need a Google browser.
cmd netstat has become my friend...

Yeah, IT LOOKS LIKE... :cool:
Take a look at your folder C:documents and settingsUSERNAMEapplication datamacromediaflashplayer
I have deleted my Google account some days ago.

I donīt need a Google browser.
cmd netstat has become my friend...
I saw that Youtube-Google account linkage thing too! I just went ahead and did it. It makes my life easier.
If you goto the macromedia site you can access a advanced settings page of your flash player and there you can switch off flashcookies (they've nicely hidden that functionality), it can sometimes create some issues, like when I first did it all embedded youtubes had no sound anymore, but they fixed that now, and it's something you accept for privacy, and with youtubes I could just click on them and it jumps to the youtube page, so it was ok.
And since youtube is owned by google it's obviously no wonder they have the capability to see the link, they own and run both so have access to the account info and cookies of both.
And since youtube is owned by google it's obviously no wonder they have the capability to see the link, they own and run both so have access to the account info and cookies of both.
by: PP MguireWell, no wonder -- Adblock has to be one of the biggest, most memory-inefficient extensions there is out there. It hasn't been updated in years. :wtf: Using it is a sure way to slow down your system. It slows down startup, slows down every single page, and will make your memory usage go through the roof.
Its been this way on all my PCs from my Socket A to this machine. Ive only recently started using a plugin and thats Adblock.
Get rid of that thing immediately, and Firefox will be so fast you'll notice it right away.
i am greatly looking forward to this... yay opensource, and yay new, i feel like they are really on to something with how web pages have changed, and how little browsers have changed over the years.... ive been thinking for the longest that i liked netscape 3.04 gold better than anything thats come out for years, i like the features of firefox, infact im kind of tied to it right now, but i would love something new that didnt perform poorly, and hopefully being dual or quad core will be of some benefit yay, any time something adds better support for that i feel a little better.
On topic: google. internet... browsar. = 1 step forward to implanting chips in our heads, woot.
Sorry.. off topic, Wshlist; can you pm me some more/detailed info about disabling flashcookies please? :)
edit: closest thing i can find related to it is this adobe article.
actually, nevermind. but thanks for the info! :)
Sorry.. off topic, Wshlist; can you pm me some more/detailed info about disabling flashcookies please? :)
edit: closest thing i can find related to it is this adobe article.
actually, nevermind. but thanks for the info! :)
by: mdm-adphI've never had an issue with AdBlock slowing FF down.
Well, no wonder -- Adblock has to be one of the biggest, most memory-inefficient extensions there is out there. It hasn't been updated in years. :wtf: Using it is a sure way to slow down your system. It slows down startup, slows down every single page, and will make your memory usage go through the roof.
Get rid of that thing immediately, and Firefox will be so fast you'll notice it right away.

