The week in your words: Chrome and punishment
Posted on 5 Sep 2008 at 17:13
In a week that saw Google release Chrome, Mozilla weep quietly into its pillow, and Microsoft begin the most bizarre advertising campaign since those Silk Cut adverts slinked off our screens, we take a look back to see what the forums made of it all.
Google launches shock web browser
"We are not building a browser." Google chief executive Eric Schmidt in 2004.
"It looks like people have some good browser choices already. We would not build a browser for the fun of building a browser." Eric Schmidt again in 2006.
"What we really needed was not just a browser, but also a modern platform for web pages and applications, and that's what we set out to build." Eric Schmidt, 2008.
That's right, Google has finally unveiled the browser it hasn't been working on for the last four years. And the company's explanation for this virgin birth? "It just happened to migrate from being false to being true," according to Sergey Brin, Google's co-founder. Glad they've cleared that up. Reaction on the forums was mixed.
"So we've got Firefox, Safari, Opera and now Chrome, plus umpteen others," laments rjp2000 who must have a nightmare choosing which cereal to buy. "Too many browsers already, and do we really need another one? Are they all going to 100% compatible? I doubt it."
Big_D was more receptive to Google's overtures - and also had a thoughtful analogy to hand, which was nice.
"It doesn't matter how many browsers they are, as long as they are standards compliant... It is like car manufacturers, why aren't we all driving around in a Ford Ka? In the end, all cars can drive on the same roads and have much the same control standards. The same is, slowly, true of browsers. IE7 only really likes Microsoft roads, the rest like standard roads and have problems when they need to negotiate Microsoft roads."
Stirring stuff, but Colsmith was feeling suspicious: "I wonder what extra information Google can harvest about us using this little baby?"
Quite a lot as it turns out. But don't worry it keeps saying it's not going to doing anything sneeky with it.
Google: Firefox and IE are not good enough
Poor Mozilla. Just a week ago it was lighting fine Cuban cigars with $20 notes after securing three years' worth of funding from Google, and this week it's watching old episodes of Dad's Army and shouting at its developers to buy war bonds and plant their own vegetables, after its biggest benefactor started arming up.
"If Google ever decided to pull the plug on them I think Mozilla would go down. In fact Google practically owns them," says TimoGunt, ever the optimist.
However, pcernie was very much in the doomed browser's camp: "I'd like to see FF survive no matter what, and I'm wondering if Chrome will pick up any disgruntled IE users who are afraid of installing FF, but trust Google after using Gmail and Earth."
It was left to geo139 play the peacekeeper Chamberlain:
"Firefox/chrome merger?"
And manny_the_second to blow it out of the water: "I think that if Google were interested in Mozilla, they would have bought them long ago. Now that they have released Chrome, I think a buy out or merger is out of the question.
advertisement
- ATI Radeon HD 5970: 42% more expensive in the UK
- Office 2010 Beta – 32-bit or 64-bit – The Choice is Clear
- Why Britain's watchdogs have fewer teeth than goldfish
- Tabbed documents: how to make Office 2010 great
- Outlook 2010 People Pane – does it spell death to Xobni
- Microsoft Outlook 2010 screenshots
- Co-Authoring in Word 2010 and SharePoint Foundation 2010
- Microsoft Outlook 2010 screenshots: Backstage view
- Flash 10.1: Developing for Desktop and Device
- Microsoft Office 2010 screenshots: Recover unsaved items
- Getting to grips with Microsoft's IT Health Environment Scanner
- Virtualise your servers
- The changing face of travel gadgets
- Build your own distributed file system
- The bulletproof Dell that costs an arm and a leg
- Microsoft Office 2010 Technical Preview: Q&A
- Lawnmowers, the TyTN II and one odd insurance request
- There'll never be a bulletproof OS
- How far can we trust apps?
- Five nice touches in Outlook 2010
advertisement
Printed from www.pcpro.co.uk




