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  • I’m officially a two browser person

    Since Google Chrome is actually out of Beta I’ve installed it on my PC at home and my laptop (and i plan to install it at the office too). I have mentioned before about why i thought i might run two browsers, compatibility with some Microsoft products, Application shortcuts and the speed increases are just a couple of reasons

    Another reason is this though

    Internet Explorer 7

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    Google Chrome

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    Note: the screenshot from Chrome looks wider as it render the page across the whole screen. In IE it the page was centered with white space down both sides – i cropped out the white space

    Now i know this may not actually be the browsers fault. It could be the way the web site designer has put the page together but the average browsing public wont really care about that

    Just for fun i fired up my Windows 7 virtual machine and opened it in IE8 (i don’t like to use Beta software on my main system where i can help it!)

    Internet Explorer 8 Beta

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    Internet Explorer 8 Beta (running in compatibility mode)

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    This isn’t a me taking a shot at Google Chrome. I’m sure if i look hard enough I’ll find pages that render just great in Chrome and look awful in IE

    That it’s worth I’m really enjoying using Chrome and since i spend a lot of time in Google Reader and Gmail it makes sense for me to take advantage of Google’s own browser

    All areas of IT seem to have their own religious wars and the browser wars are one of the fiercest. Just remember with any software you have the choice to use which ever fits your needs and for me that means using multiple browsers. Not blindly swearing that my first choice of browser is the best there is, everyone should be using and all other browsers suck!

  • Unreasonable?

    Isn’t amazing how demanding some people can be, even when they are getting something for nothing

    Google have introduced a channel system for releases of Chrome

     

    You can subscribe to one of our update channels:

    • Stable channel. Everyone is on the Stable channel when they first install Google Chrome. The Stable channel is updated with features and fixes once they have been throughly tested in the Beta channel. If you want a rock solid browser but don’t need the latest features, the Stable channel is for you.
    • Beta channel. People who like to use and help refine the latest features subscribe to the Beta channel. Every month or so, we promote stable and complete features from the Dev channel to the Beta channel. The Beta channel is more stable than Dev, but may lack the polish one expects from a finished product.
    • Developer preview channel. The Dev channel is where ideas get tested (and sometimes fail). The Dev channel can be very unstable at times, and new features usually require some manual configuration to be enabled. Still, simply using Dev channel releases is an easy (practically zero-effort) way for anyone to help improve Google Chrome.

     

    Sounds like a pretty cool idea.

    They also mentioned some of the new features available for people in the dev channel (release notes here) with one of them being a move away from the WinHTTP library so they can become more platform independent (Linux/Mac)

    I finished reading the blog post and thought it was good post that communicated where they are at the moment

    As always the comments on blogs can sometimes be better than the article and a couple jumped out at me

    Blah blah blah. When’re ya gonna release a Linux version is all I care about.

     

    and

    This Article lacks a Linux version. You can help by releasing one, asap.
    Cheers,
    Torrid

     

    I actually laughed out loud at that last one

    It conjured an image in my head of someone writing a letter to customer services

    Dear Sir

    I’m writing with regard to your latest blog post about your Chrome browser

    It’s not enough that you are giving us the capability to preview upcoming features via you beta and dev channels. Nor will I accept that developing your own implementation of the HTTP network protocol shows that you have plans to make the software available on other operating systems

    The article is severely missing a Linux version!!

    I demand that you release a Linux version immediately

    I pay good money for this software……..

    Regards

     

    Can’t you tell it’s the weekend!

  • Google Chrome – First Usage Thoughts

    Yes I know it’s been out a while but yesterday was the first time I’d gotten around to installing Google Chrome. Mainly because I didn’t want to install it on a production machine (being a beta and all) so with after getting back yesterday afternoon it was the first time in ages I actually had a couple of hours with nothing specific to do!

    I’ve commented on the features that caught my eye a little while back so I’ll start there with two of the features I mentioned

    Application shortcuts

    This feature isn’t a groundbreaking technological advance but I think it’s a really great idea

    There are many places we visit on the web now that we consider applications instead of just web sites

    Google reader and Google Mail are good examples of this. If your a heavy Google mail user you would potentially have it for the entire time you have your computer on. When using it along with your other Internet activities it can get lost in the other tabs. Application shortcuts allow you to a create a desktop shortcut that launches the application in question and also removes all the browser UI fluff you don’t need (other tabs, address bar, etc)

    This also makes it appear like just another desktop application your running. The effect works quite well and when you click links within the application it’s clever enough to pass these onto a regular instance of Chrome for your browse with (again the same as a desktop application)

    I found it quite effective

    So if the IE team and the people from Firefox are listening..could you “borrow” this please?

    V8 Javascript VM

    A brand new java engine built from the ground up that does away with interpreting java code and actually compiles it

    Does this make any difference?

    Definitely

    When I tried it with GMail and Google Reader the whole experience felt “snappier” 

    As consumer test I browsed to the Sky Sports page as for years as found this page to be quite slow and it certainly made it feel more responsive. I also noticed a big difference when using Facebook

    That said I tried to buy something online last night and it just would not play ball. When I switched back to IE it went through first go

     

    I haven’t tried any of the Gears features yet so wont comment on those

    So overall it’s not bad. It won’t replace IE as my browser of choice just yet (I prefer the “premium” version of Outlook Web Access too much!) but it will certainly change my habits

    I’m thinking of using IE as my main browser but using Chrome to setup application shortcuts for my online apps.

    From a performance perspective they have definitely raised the bar so I hope the completion step do their best to get as near as possible which will be of the benefit to everyone.

    With the whole cloud computer paradigm about to explode we’ll be doing far more in the browser and application developers will be doing more interesting and complex things so we’ll be expecting a lot more from our browsers

    I’m not sure if it’s the start of a new browser war but it’ll certainly be interesting!

  • Google Chrome – One interesting bit, ok two, maybe three

    When the Internet is in full blown hype mode I usually don’t even bother to blog about it. But this I thought I’d make an exception on this one

    However, I haven’t even downloaded Chrome yet! (I have seen it in action though – some people can’t wait!)

    However, a few things caught my eye

    Application shortcuts

    Didn’t fully appreciate this when I first read about it but the Gmail blog explains it well

    If you use Gmail or Google reader (or whatever) you can create an application shortcut. The idea is that when the browser opens the page it gets rid of the all the interface elements that remind you that your working in a browser (tabs, address bar, etc) so that it looks like a regular “desktop” application

    V8 Javascript VM

    Read about it here but in a nutshell Google have started from scratch with the javascript virtual machine. If it’s as fast as they claim it will make vast improvements to the more complex web apps (have you got any friends on Facebook with a million apps installed? Fed up of waiting for that page to load?)

    Google Gears (or just Gears as it’s now known)

    When I first read about Google gears I didn’t pay it any serious attention. My initial thoughts were “offline access? if I was that bothered about offline access to my RSS feeds I’d use a desktop app!”

    I know realise i was missing the point. As well as doing lots of caching to help speed things up it’s also a local database engine. The web developer can shift some of the database load to the client and help prevent lots of trips back to the server (vastly simplified I know!)

    MySpace are using it, as are WordPress and obviously Google apps like Google Reader are using it

    The thing here though is that it’s built into the browser. Previously you had to download as an add-in for your preferred browser and I never got around to it. Have you?

    So what’s my point?

    Well I don’t really have one. As I said these features jumped out at me. They are pretty unique to Chrome. Things like tabs in separate processes, sandboxes, incognito mode, crash control and the like are appearing in the “other browsers” already

    That said if you put all three of these features together and then use some of Google’s apps it could make for an interesting experience

    I’m a pretty heavy user of Google reader, regular user of Gmail and occasional user of Google docs

    I could still keep my preferred browser (if I wanted to) and install chrome then setup application shortcuts and use chrome just for using my google apps

    I’ll get speed increases, offline access and it will behave in a similar way to a desktop program so they is a chance I wont even notice I’m using a browser!

    Anyway just thinking out loud

    I wont be installing it on my main machines just yet due to it’s brand new beta status, security flaw and questionable EULA

    My poor old laptop is looking like a candidate though

    If you want another opinion on Chrome, Vlad obviously has one (which is definitely worth a read) so take a look here