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Interesting developments in the browser world lately. Between the new beta of IE8 and Google releasing the beta of their new browser (called “Chrome”), not to mention interesting work by the Mozilla team here as well, there’s as much happening as I can eve
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You need
Internet Explorer anyway since microsoft sites wont work best on others
Firefox ,the best browser in world
Opera , king of mobiles
Now chrome , To run google products better
Aol, Pogo browser
Yahoo browser , to run yahoo products better
Salesforce browser, to run salesforce better
U want to build some new feature then put it in browser and send updates , you will loose standardizing
It is difficult for developers to build for all
10 months ago
10 months ago
Most people still use IE, and don't know what a browser is. (IE and the Internet is synonymous to them, one and the same) and on the others side Chrome appears to be meant for more advanced users capable of trouble-shooting multiple processes. Thats not exactly a huge market.
7 months ago
It's true that Google becoming a browser monopoly is bad, but we have to remember that google has always offered it's services for FREE to users. The entity makes its profit by ad-sales and by keeping its model free to users to, it keeps more eyes open to ads. Google is making the web more individualized for the surfer, but more open and standardized for the developer, which is exactly firefox's model, but Google is doing so at a much more sophisticated level, in my opinion.
10 months ago
The reason Google is doing Google Gears is to bring the next generation browser technologies earlier to the current browsers, so it could take advantage of those technologies for its advantages. In other words, it's trying to standardize the features among the browsers. If Chrome is to only run Google products better, then it would be contradicting with the reason of having Gears.
I think in order for Google to maintain its status in the web, they will need to use Chrome to push the improvements among other browsers. So it is very unlikely to me to see Google products only run well in Chrome.
10 months ago
I took the initiative to translate your post into French and have posted it on my blog.
http://standblog.org/blog/post/2008/09/02/A-pro...
I wanted to write something, but leveraging your work sounds smarter :-)
Please let me know if it's an issue.
10 months ago
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From the developer standpoint: Please, no more browsers - specially when one of them is almost perfect. Orat least heading in that right direction). I can not test web app in 15 environments. I can't. A have to live, too.
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This is happening with Gecko engine - used by Firefox, K-Meleon, Epiphany, etc. - all of them behave differently.
So yes, you will have to test on all of them. And on all OS'es that it's could be ran on.
10 months ago
No more web engines! More browsers are welcome.
10 months ago
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I think that you're right in your view, John. It's all about people making the web smarter. In an age where the Internet is so important, and yet companies like Comcast and Time-Warner want to cap bandwidth, doing what they can to prohibit the internet's growth, I know that I can always count on Mozilla and Google to be doing what they can to make the web better. Good stuff ahead!
10 months ago
So, if Google comes up with Chrome with actual code that is developed from scratch, I would very well welcome it.
However, the glitch here is that, Google's Browser is a new entrant and we never know how much standards are accessible in that Browser. Firefox 3 is in my opinion is the BEST Browser of all as of now. Even if we get Google Chrome, I still think Firefox 3 is going to be the Top 1.
By the way, thanks John for your transparent comments.
10 months ago
10 months ago
It says so... :)
Also, apart from WebKit which is a browser rendering engine, most of the technologies introduced in Google Chrome are developed fully by Google (including the V8 JavaScript engine). Please check the comics above to know full features.
Still, my stand will be on Firefox and John already updated that they're creating the TraceMonkey (http://shaver.off.net/diary/2008/08/22/the-birt...) which should be more worthier than V8 or may be...
10 months ago
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A browser duopoly between two goliaths that are duty-bound by american corporate law to serve their own self interest, and therefore that of their shareholders, is not good for the web.
Let's say that Firefox survives. Arguably Google has enough exposure to push Chrome to a large audience very quickly. Most people who do a search can be offered Chrome and why wouldn't they use it? Lack of extensions? 70% of web users (aka IE users) largely do without extensions. It is feasible that before we see Firefox 4, Chrome could already have taken double digit market share, if not higher. If Firefox maxes out at 20%, is it unreasonable to predict Chrome might eventually take up to 30% or more by the time the Mozilla Google money runs out in 2011? If Chrome + Firefox adds up to a Google search box priority in 50% of browsers, with Microsoft search box priority going to the other 50% of browsers (IE users), what do we have? A web duopoly based on search advertising cash.
The last time the web had a duopoly (1997, Netscape and Microsoft), it destroyed the web for half a dozen years or half the web's life (Netscape died, Microsoft froze it's development until the rise of Mozilla in 2004). Standards were as much of a mess as they are now. What is to say that another duopoly is not going to kill the web again? The same old issues still exist: an ineffective standards body beholden to, and therefore corruptible by, self-interested browser vendors to the point of slow motion; inconsistent implementations of what standards are eventually agreed upon; staggered release schedules, upgrade uptake and reliable usage metrics meaning developers are never sure what code will achieve the desired output for the vast majority of users.
What the web lacks is a legal jurisdiction. Self-regulation has failed. Only the legal power of the EU has proved a big enough sword to force Microsoft to come to the interoperability table after the US Department of Slap-on-the-wrist Justice failed to hand down any meaningful anti-trust remedy. The web needs an alliance of legal entities across the major geopolitical zones of the world that can hand down enforceable requirements on to browser vendors. The web is a public utility like any other infrastructure (roads, energy ...). It is time for that utility to be governed by representatives of the public, not by silicon valley imperialist technical whims.
10 months ago
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usage_share_of_web...
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The funny thing about this situation is that I got to this post using Google search, hehehe!
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Although I have not tested the Chrome browser yet,where do I download it from?.
I think it will be big battle between Firefox and Chrome, I personally have been using Firefox for over 2 years, and it suits all my needs. With so many cool add-ons and such a huge community support, it will be difficulty to make more improvements.But I have to agree that Google web browser has some nice performance, stability and speed innovation.
From what I understood the browser will not crash because of one single site (witch happens in Firefox), it will just crash a TAB that is amazing to hear! Also the Javascript has been improved with a new V8 Javascript enigne, has some cool technology behind it.
But Firefox 3.1 is full power and has also the Javascript enhanced by TraceMonkey, Ubiquity, Weave and Firefox Mobile. I think the winner of these battle will be the users who will get better products in a tough competition. But I believe Google will make its browser work better with its own products like gmail, google, etc… Microsoft will keep making it running better for its own products, OWA, hotmail etc… And firefox? Will have to keep up being a well around compatible browser.
The revolution is here!
http://felipeferreira.net/?p=38
10 months ago
do you know if apart of this wonderful technologies ;-) the Firefox team plans to fix the "print selection" infamous bug ( it is 4 years old)? i'm tired of getting blank pageswhen i print
10 months ago
I have to thank all the Mozilla comunity for the development you've been doing so far. As you say, Chrome will bring Google's experience into the browser market. I think that will also benefit all the other browser developing companies, since new usage standards will be understood by everyone.
Claiming that Google will build a browser from "scratch" is a metaphor. They're building a new browser based on all the other companies that have been building browsers so far.
I just hope Google will know how to help to create new standards together with other companies and help Web's development; as other companies have been doing; and not create a new "browser war".
I'll probably install it, but as I also have been installing other browsers in my computer (namely Opera, IE - which I'm forced too and Safari) I'll continue to give my preference to the truly open-source (open minded) Firefox (installed since its appearance and traveling with me through my OS changes).
10 months ago
Open is open. Google is not developing anything specific to make its own web apps work better, more, it is working on making all web apps work better.
Yay.
10 months ago
You are Apple;
This means that if it were not enough of a conflict of interest (Iphone VS Google's Android) to have Google CEO Eric Schmidt sit on your board - It is now. Look for Schmidt to resign sometime in the next six months.
If you are Microsoft;
This means that if you ever considered making Internet Explorer open source in the past, now is the time... You can not afford to wait, not even another minute. Expect Microsoft to make Vaporware like noise over the next few months about cloud widgets to give IE closer ties to cloud based initiatives.
If you are Yahoo;
you need to buy Mozilla.
If you are Firefox;
Keep your friends close, and your enemies closer...yes continue with your Google revenue deal, but learn how to monetize your Browser outside of a paid search deal. Leverage your large user base to form "spin-off" type "power of the crowd" businesses. Note to Firefox, hey you guys ARE a social network...you just haven't figured that out yet.
If you are Sun;
Realize that Java is even less relevant every day. First we kicked you out of client side computing because you were a resource hog. Realize that Java will now continue to be less and less relevant on the Server. What a waste of a good company... McNealy must have got hit in the head with one to many hockey pucks.
If you are a social network;
"social networks" would follow along with users in the browser. Truth be told, we thought it would be Facebook, or even more likely Firefox that would lead in this initiative. So if you are a social network, you need to know now Chrome is the first step in a series of moves that will make it unnecessary for your peeeps to ever visit your site (directly) again.
If you are an application developer;
Life used to be simple, eh? You knew that you should be developing applications for Windows, because that is where the 100's of millions of users were. Fast forward, and now you need to choose what platforms to support, and when. Of course it makes sense to develop for Windows still, but Apple now has a mass of millions of Mac OSx users, and if it a browser based app, write once for Safari, and it should work without much adaptation on the Iphone. There are over a billion cell phones in use world wide, however every phone requires writing to separately (yes even all those different flavors of Java are different phone to phone. Suddenly with Android coming, and a matching desktop browser you need to be here.
Lastly if you are a consumer;
There is always a bottleneck somewhere ... Think back 5-10 years ago, before what we now refer to broadband... Dial up was painffulllllyy slow, and when you tried to browse, the bottleneck was in your "last mile" connectivity. Once you got broadband, the lag time in reaching a site was likely in your PC (not enough ram, slow processor, etc). Before either of those issues though it was the software that was not "smart" enough to keep up with the ever faster CPU's being created.
Look for Chrome to optimize all these new "cloud" based application initiatives like Google Gears, etc. This is just another nail in the coffin for desktop based computing. In 10 years, likely 90%+ of your applications will reside somewhere outside of your home or workplace - but certainly not on your desktop.
www.twitter.com/A_F
10 months ago
I'm an application/web developer and excited to see the new possibilities that Chrome brings with the new Javascript engine, application shortcuts, and other new annovative features. To me that just means I can be more creative. Embrace change,and speak for yourself if you don't want to.
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They know perfectly well that they will not be able to mass-distribute a cloud computing application that is only supported by 10% of the market (assuming they will achieve that market share).
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MS is an evil empire in OS and Google is an evil empire in Web.
I think using Chrome will keep track of everything you do online.
10 months ago
I understand that they track user behavior. This is primarily for ad serving and logging statistical info, with the latter feeding Google's "thought furnace".
MS has always been about increasing profitability with hard, mafia type deals while Google has based it's profitability on factors such as trust and quality.. much like Mozilla. It's only fair that Google makes money from mostly all quality products that they bring to you for free.
10 months ago
10 months ago
1-It's yet to be supported on Linux (I have no clue the Linux/WinX--ratios), however I bet a large portion of the "GeeK" base makes up Firefox usage (like me).
2-In my opinion, the "USER BASE" for Chrome, are going to the the "hard core" Google Fans (Gmail users, IGoogle users, etc.)---for example my 70+yr old father, he loses his IGoogle Home Page settings and he thinks "the internet" is broken and he can't get on.....*grin*
3-Chrome has a LONG way to go. (I downloaded a few hours ago. The "version number" is (0.2.149.27)....not even a 1.x....
4-TRUST ME, it's FireFox Google will reach out to/embrace to gain market share. (that's an Immediate 20%)---
"by default", over night I bet Google has a 10%+ share "just because" it's Google....
WIll be interesting to see which broswer get's cannibalized most.....
MY Wager.....8% comes from I.E. drop, 2% Firefox drop (curiosity seekers from the Geeks--like me).
In the short term, the browser usage will hover around 5-7% (as the "I hate MSFT crowd embraces it, curiosity seekers abandon it).
Long term....it will do NOTHING BUT chew away at I.E. Base...plain an simple......
Mozilla has ZERO to be fearful of (and if ANYTHING should be dancing in the streets that the "Google OS" rumors are actually Webbased BRowers (vs OS Kernel based).
Just my opinion.
10 months ago
The FF troopers: Now, on the other hand, how many OS's come with Firefox installed in them? By logic, I'm assuming that almost all Firefox users use Firefox because they took the initiative of installing it. And this is because they know or heard that firefox is a better option than IE or Safari.
With this assumption, I'm certain that a significant number of Firefox users on windows will d/l Chrome and run it side-by-side with FF just to check it out. I'm trying to say that Chrome will def eat into FF market share.
I've spoken purely from a market share point of view. FF will however, survive the market "cannibalization" simply because of its proven quality standards.
10 months ago
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I'm not against the fact that Google has a new browser, but they are trying to sell disadvantages as advantages; they are trying to sell cold coffee as new innovation, they are not dishonest. And I strongly dislike that.
10 months ago
Then why do we see the 'Restore previous session / Start new session' dialog box so often with firefox? Cmon, give credit where credit belongs. Chrome has done a great job
10 months ago
10 months ago
It may never happen but it would be nice to see all of the big names of the web come together and make one browser to rule them all.
10 months ago
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I must say, i'm a Firefox' user for a long time. I just like it, but mainly i like its extensions.
Firefox 3 is good, we can say better than FF2 or FF1, but I just can't say it is an "incredibly great browser".
Firefox makes me mad when i try to use it in my Ubuntu. And as I don't expect it will get better in Linux (it is an known problem at least since 2001 - https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=90198), I hope Chrome get very popular to get as many extensions as FF has. And then I'll definitely change.
10 months ago
1) Multi threading. WHAT an obvious solution Google came up with!!! Oh so many problems it fixes in one sweep. My oh my I just love that. Please don't come with that stuff about "one thread should be enough for everyone", because it is just dumb. My web experience is AWFUL using Firefox with lots of tabs. I sit fuming for way to much of the day because of this single threading.
2) Memory consumption. How can this Firefox thing eat 1 gig of memory when I just have about 20-30 tabs up, displaying complex webpages?! See, I know it is a bit - but I can't accept 1 gig at any rate. And Chrome uses less than a tenth for the same set.
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Not only it introduces some new concepts, but being open, Mozilla can easily take ideas and code from Google Chrome to improve Firefox, although some key aspect of Chrome would probably require a massive redesign of Firefox.
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toolbar=no,scrollbars=no,width=300,height=300,resi zable=no')</script>
10 months ago
No I know what I want: I want something as flexible as Firefox, with all those extensions (that is a MUST-HAVE) but with a rendering engine and javascript engine beneath that are as fast as Chrome's. That separation of tabs in processes its a great idea too. Look that there is nothing that IE uniquely offers that's worth to me... Incognito and IE's equivalent are a nicety, but far from imprecindible, and could be probably accomplished in FFX with addons if desired.
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it's unbloated and does what i need.... now who's going to write me the web dev plugin????oh.. and eye dropper...??? oh and i do like the..... will this also suddenly become bloated?
10 months ago
10 months ago
Seriously, Chrome is good news for all browsers, except for IE!
Microsoft is just a company trying to survive in their own way. But that is not an excuse for making a extremely bad browser. IE is the worst browser for web applications ( http://kourge.net/node/122 ), and Google is all about web apps. With a big brand name, Google can lower IE share numbers much faster then Firefox. All browsers can win in this, because different users want different things and lower IE share means bigger shares for all the rest.
I just have to wait for the Linux version. :(
10 months ago
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Too little too soon. Back to the drawing board.
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I love Firefox. Google, please don't kill the fox... :'(
10 months ago
http://www.surfchrome.com/index.php/gallery/chr...
10 months ago
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In short: I think there isn't room for 4 web browser engines (IE, Gecko, WebKit, and Opera). And no sane web author will bother to check for 4 engines for look/compatibility/features and bugfixes.
The question I've been asking myself are these:
#1 Can Mozilla's Gecko ever become size and speed competitive with WebKit ?
#2 Can Mozilla ever convince (if #1) Google to have them switch from Webkit to Gecko?
#3 Gecko right now must be #2 in market share. The only way to keep this lead after the assault by Google would be to put Gecko into as MANY mobile devices as you can. This won't happen unless #1 is true
#4 If #3 doesn't become true (Gecko making a sizeable dent into the mobile space) then sooner or later you will find that WebKit has #2 market share after Microsoft, and Gecko a distant third. At that point... congratulations, you've become Opera.
#5 so... by following all of the above...
a) Does it make sense to continue investing in Gecko?
b) Can't Mozilla integrate all the current features (XUL, plug-ins, extensions) and deliver all that on top of WebKit?
c) Is there any way webkit and gecko could be integrated to become one? (that's assuming there's anything in Gecko worth integrating into WebKit and that the webkit project managers would accept it).
In short: I don't think there'a a room for IE, Gecko, and WebKit. I think there's room for two big players in the rendering engine space (I'm not talking browsers, I'm talking about ENGINES), one of those open source (the other will be MSFT with their monopoly for as long as it lasts).
Would Mozilla lose its mystique by dropping its own rendering engine and being just a framework and apps built around another engine? Is the "engine" (Gecko) the soul of Mozilla? or is Firefox the current soul of Mozilla?
Thoughts? Comments? Expletives?
9 months ago
9 months ago
A major part of Google's business is data mining. Targetted ads, adwords etc. How better, then, than to use their own browser to take this to another level. I generally like Google, but all business tends towards monopoly and hence to tyranny, like the "evil empire" of old- MS and Intel. If Chrome or it's descendents become the de facto browser, this surely cannot be good, and if there's one search engine the currently using IE public ARE aware of, it's Google. This puts them in a unique position. Google is now a brand name, too.
Competition is good, but often bewilders the average user -the vast range of Linux distros and apps that come with it, (several GUIS, for example), are a classic case of bewildering choice versus crap-but-we're-used-to-it IE.
Having tried Chrome, I can't see anything in it at the moment that would make me ditch FF3- and how many browsers do you need? (Except JS developers, plainly!).
9 months ago
9 months ago
ChromeGuru - Unofficial Google Chrome Community & Support Forums.
9 months ago
Thought this would be of interest:
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?...
Best,
Dhiren Harchandani
9 months ago
Keep in mind that google likes to provide closed source applications.
9 months ago
(double post=my bad)
9 months ago
Unofficial Google Chrome Community & Support
First Google Chrome Dedicated Themebase!
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