Several thousand IT professionals gather in Sydney today for Microsoft’s TechEd, the company’s annual love-in for the technically-inclined.
But chances are that they’ll be more interested in Google’s latest release, a new Web Browser called Chrome forever buries the myth of Microsoft as innovator and gives the open source community a lot to worry about too.
The House That Gates Built has long run the line that it should be “free to innovate”. But innovation, in Microsoft-speak, means putting in features that make the computing universe revolve around Windows so that customers have little choice but to buy from Microsoft, not its rivals.
This desire was shown in the first “browser war,” when Microsoft documents show it wanted to “cut off the oxygen supply” to rival Netscape so that it could make its own browser the dominant piece of software with which to surf the Net, then clean up selling the software that makes web pages available to the world.
Netscape succumbed to a combination of this pressure and some dumb decisions of its own.
But a second browser war erupted when the Mozilla Foundation launched Firefox. Mozilla creates software under an ‘open source’ regime, whereby the programming code that comprises software is available for anyone to see and re-use. It also uses technical standards open to all, fuelled by a philosophy that says the more people join a community, the more valuable the community becomes to its members.
Chrome takes a lot of those community-based standards, builds on them and gives away Google’s advances to anyone who wants to have a fiddle under the same open source arrangement Mozilla uses.
Plenty of the work Google has done is a geek’s delight that re-invents the innards of a web browser to make it faster and get around Firefox’s tendency to hog computer memory. A new user interface has the potential to make the web a more pleasant, faster, safer place for everyday surfers.
These new ideas infusing Chrome are light years’ beyond Microsoft’s latest effort, Internet Explorer 8, which is the giant’s first try at doing a browser that actually follows the standards the rest of the computing world adheres to. That effort, ironically, threatens to undo much of the work business has done building applications that can talk to the previous, quirky, non-standard versions of Internet Explorer.
Microsoft is also playing catchup on other fronts. The company has hired Jerry Seinfeld, of all people, to convince the world that Windows Vista is not a dog. It also needs to find a way to its shareholders how the $US5 billion-plus it spends on R&D each year can make a difference to a share price that has been stagnant for most of this millennium.
Had Microsoft actually innovated significantly in that time, these would not be problems. But even its latest efforts like the online file-sharing tool Live Mesh are not as elegant as those created by scrappy start-ups (Sugar Sync cr*ps all over Live Mesh). Now that Google has leapfrogged its efforts with a browser that changes the game, Redmond looks lamer than ever.
Chrome also changes the game for the Mozilla Foundation, source of the Firefox web browser. Firefox is a fine browser that has won plenty of market share for innovating just a little better than Microsoft. But as with much open source software which is written by volunteers because they think it’s a good idea for their desired programs to exist for free, it is a solid imitator with superior plumbing and some nice new touches. Few open source programs, however, represent a quantum leap on the scale of Chrome.
And here’s where things get weird: Mozilla is largely backed by Google, which appears to be picking a fight with its protege, or at least pointing out to the world where the clever innovators really live. That’s a kick in the teeth for open source, as well as a kick in the nether regions for Microsoft and its shareholders.
But Chrome may not be great news for Google, either. The company has floated above petty concerns like browsers, trawling for ad dollars while trying to drag the world into a new age of computing where everything you need lives in “the cloud” somewhere on the Net, instead of relying on a PC to store programs and files. Getting itself down into the muck of a market already wracked by two “wars” is new territory for Google.
And let’s not forget that Chrome is generally applied in a thin layer to make something look shiny. Whatever Google hopes Chrome will achieve, the benefits to Google — and there will be plenty — are probably less obvious than the benefits to users.
Please. Google’s day old, preview release, browser has done no such thing. The author of this article has a blatant bias against Microsoft and will clearly leap on anything to justify their position. Their opinion is hardly news worthy and should have been left to the blogwatch section.
Google’s new browser offers little new to the market and is giving most web designers a hard time rationalising their love for all things google and their annoyance at having yet another browser to tweak their website for.
Did someone get paid for writing this twaddle?
“gives the open source community a lot to worry about too.”
Chrome _is_ open source and as such is far from a worry to the open source community.
http://code.google.com/chromium/
Google brings some fresh ideas and a bit of magic on top of some existing open source technologies (such as Webkit) and adds to the open source community with it’s own components (The javascript VM and Google Gears).
Well I’m all for innovation but to be frank from a web designers point of view this just makes us more work with additional compatibility testing. Now we have to test yet another site for browser rendering. Seeing as F.F is just across the road from the Googleplex as Larry Page says why not throw your resources into their ‘not for profit’ Mozilla foundation. Also it seems the team at Microsoft now have something for their legal team to consider anti-trust allegations on big G.
Also interesting are some of the concerns being raised about the Terms of Service agreement entered into with Google when installing Chrome.
http://oakleafblog.blogspot.com/2008/09/chromes-evil-terms-of-service.html
Most software comes with eyebrow raising conditions attached these days and it is good to see Google is no different.
Well, I downloaded Chrome this morning and gave it a half hour tryout. Admittedly, it’s a Beta version but it does seem to have a few problems. My reaction is that it’s slow. Slower than Firefox & IE. Sometimes the vertical slidebar works, sometimes it doesn’t. No apparent reason why.
It doesn’t seem able to play videos. That is – say you’re browsing a newspaper and you click on the “video” link regarding the article. In Firefox or IE this just pops up another tab (or window) and plays the video. In Chrome – the new tab opens but the video won’t run. Perhaps there might be some new plugins that need to be installed but there is no button to say “install plugins” and no hint anywhere that this might be needed.
What irked me most was Chrome’s poor organisation of Favorites (or Bookmarks). I followed their instructions for importing bookmarks from Firefox and it just lumps them all together in a folder called “other Bookmarks”. To then organise these into new folders by category you have to do it on a very slow on-by-one process. It doesn’t have a window where you can organise bookmarks like Firefox. Each time you select one bookmark to transfer to a new folder – the list of all bookmarks in “Other” goes off and you then have to bring it back again before you can start the next single transfer. Bloody awful!
Perhaps I’m doing something wrong?? Is there some other software I need to install to make it work better?