Well I waited and waited yesterday until I had to go out - but I now this morning have Google Chrome running on my pc. And so far so good!It's identifying my most commonly visited pages so that when I open a new tab I can just pick one of them if I wish. I can even slide each tab around to reorder them if I want. One of Google's major claims is that the browser makes much better use of available memory - so time will tell on that one.
News reports (on TV last night and across the web) are saying this is Google challenging Microsoft. I think it's more likely to be a challenge to Firefox - which is a shame, seeings they've worked well together for a while now (and I can already see Firefox 3 features in Chrome). I recently got a new PC (and am not finding vista as bad as I thought I might!) and it came with Google Desktop installed. So are Microsoft going to keep that allegiance with Google now? Apparently Google were always worried that Microsoft might bring out their own search engine and drive their users straight to it through IE and away from Google.
Whilst Jo Public seem to have an amazing dependence on Google (I am shocked by the amount of web users who believe the Google search box is the only way to access any website), they are also scared of 'downloading' anything. Or don't see a change as necessary. We can see this from the number of existing IE6 users. I've got a laptop with IE6 on it that we keep for testing - but even I have to be careful not to accept the IE7 update that Microsoft keep offering. And yet, somehow, so many people do still resist it! So I'm really not sure what will win out - the Google brand, or the lazy and cautious public.
Also - does anyone actually believe that Google 'accidentally' sent that email early?! The Google exec on the news last night, sheepishly explaining their school-boy error ("well we are only 10 years old, so we are a school boy") did little to sway my thoughts about a pr stunt.
Meanwhile, what will become of Firefox? The developers favourite. Whilst I'm sat here trying out Chrome (and also - I really don't like the name!) I do feel pangs of guilt about my former favourite shortcut sitting unused on my desktop - my computer's hardly ever on without Firefox being open. I feel Firefox - perhaps along with Safari a while ago - set the tone that IE wasn't up to the job in todays world (in many cases). So I hope they continue to prosper and Google doesn't take their recent world record title (most downloads in one day) away from them too soon!
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