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Monday, September 01, 2008 2:28 PM PT Posted by Harry McCracken

Chrome: Google Does a Browser...Finally

googlechromelogo.png
Sometimes, rumor turns into reality in a flash. Sometimes it takes awhile. The scuttlebutt about Google working on a browser that dates to at least 2004 turns out to have been true: Over at All Things Digital, Kara Swisher is reporting that sources tell her that Google will officially launch Chrome, its browser, tomorrow.

Chrome is ambitious for sure--not a me-too product or a rebranding of someone else's browser, but a significantly new entrant that, on paper at least, sounds mighty appealing. Highlights:

--It has a tab-centric interface, with a default home page that shows snapshots of your favorite sites and new memory management techniques designed to prevent tabs from bogging down your browsing;

--It uses sandboxing to prevent malware from doing damage to your PC;

--It includes built-in anti-phishing;

--It uses an all-new JavaScript implementation designed to provide snappy performance for Web-based applications;

--It includes Gears, the Google-initiated platform that helps online apps provide offline capabilities;

--It's open source;

--It's based on Webkit, the same open-source browser engine that powers Apple's Safari.

I gleaned these facts from a remarkable 38 page comic book by cartoonist/explainer Scott McCloud. Google Blogoscoped has posted the whole thing, but it's long and dense with info for developers. So I've posted a condensed highlight reel over at my Technologizer site, covering most of the stuff of most interest to us folks who just use browsers rather than develop Internet content for them.

I read all 38 pages of the comic book, and while I thoroughly enjoyed doing so, I was still left with as many questions as answers. I've asked ten of the Chrome questions I'm most curious about at Technologizer.

I can't wait to try it out for myself. And while I've often written that you shouldn't assume that every new Google product will change the world, or even be very good out of the gate--here's my take on the lackluster state of Knol--I can't imagine that Chrome will just fizzle. And I'd love to hear your thoughts about it.

Comments

Sounds sweet! I will totally try it out. I think it is about time some one did something different with Internet browsers; and non better than Google to do it.

Ryan22158
September 01, 2008
3:44 PM PT

I just downloaded and installed Google Chrome. If Chrome is going to be a success on the internet, Chrome will have to support addons. For example I love AdBlock Plus in FireFox and had forgotten what it is like to browse the web with ads. (including PCWorld!!) When I used Chrome, I felt like I was using Safari, no AdBlock Plus, no Siteadvisor, no Google Toolbar!!, and very limited options for customizing the look and feel of Chrome. I know Chrome is in Beta and most addons for FF will be ported to Chrome (maybe) in time, and I look forward to seeing what the Google team does with the browser, but for now, I will stay with FF3. I also hope that some of Chrome's good points (separate processes, drag tabs, etc) will make it into FF3.1 or 3.2 :)

poweruser2
September 02, 2008
12:50 PM PT
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