Hands on with Google's Chrome browser

Tue Sep 2, 2008 4:56PM EDT

See Comments (39)

Years ago, rumors made the rounds that Google was working on a web browser of its own. But then Firefox came out and Google seems to love the 'Fox folks (and in fact last week extended an agreement giving them cash and engineering help through 2011), so most figured the GBrowser had fallen off the table.

Imagine the industry's surprise then when Google Chrome was formally announced yesterday, abruptly introducing a fourth major browser (don't forget Safari!) to the rapidly fragmenting stew of web surfing apps.

The first public beta of Chrome became available for download just a few hours ago. I've been using it all day (and am actually composing this post using Chrome), and wanted to provide some (admittedly early) thoughts about the browser for those who want to crawl on the bleeding edge.

Chrome's big selling point will be of only minimal interest to the bulk of web users out there: a new architecture that, in a nutshell, compartmentalizes each tab along with its own process. The upshot is that if one tab crashes, it won't take down your whole browser, but will only crash that tab. Anyone who's had a dozen tabs or windows open at once and seen the whole browser go poof will likely appreciate this feature. (Security should be greatly improved as well.)

Design-wise, Chrome is familiar yet new. Tabs now appear along the very top of the window, above the address bar, and there is no text menu bar available at all. You can access a few simple options through an options icon, but otherwise, there are no traditional functions to be found. By default there's not even a home icon! (If you want to save a page, for example, you'll have to right-click it instead of going to the File menu.) It will take most users a while to adapt to it, but any web user should have minimal trouble doing so.

Easily the best feature of Chrome is its blazing speed. It's ridiculously fast, seriously. I almost couldn't believe it, but test after test showed that pages loaded about twice as fast with Chrome as they do with both Firefox and the beta of Internet Explorer 8. (Other tests have shown different results, however; so your mileage may vary.) Also good: I've had only one rendering issue with Chrome so far (the "insert link" feature with Yahoo's internal publishing engine; I had to finish this post with Firefox). Other than that one problem, pages look exactly how they're supposed to, making it comparable to Firefox in compatibility and light-years ahead of IE8's laughable, intentionally incompatible rendering engine. Still, I won't be able to use Chrome in day-to-day use, at least for now.

Chrome's default home page is unique, too. Check it out in the image above: Nine screenshots, dynamically chosen from the pages you visit the most. Not sure if it's a gimmick or really useful yet, but it's different. The history view is also impressive, better than any of the alternatives.

The real downside of Chrome is its immaturity. Some of Chrome's attempts at uniqueness just don't work: There's a weird URL auto-fill system that suggests search results (above history results) as you type. For example, as I type "CHR" to try go to "chrisnull.com," Chrome unhelpfully suggests "calgaryhealthregion.ca." I have never once found this feature useful and would prefer Chrome re-split search and the URL bar instead of combining them haphazardly like this.

Of course, features we now take for granted in many browsers are wholly absent here for now. There are no additional toolbars or plug-ins available yet: I can't really live without the Google toolbar's Autofill feature, and the lack of AdBlock and some of Firefox's other major plug-ins is soul crushing. Worst of all, there's no spell check feature, so if there are any typos in this post, I blame Google. (See update below.) Some of this may change with time, but Chrome is intentionally designed, like Google itself, with minimalism in mind.

There's lots more in Chrome that I'm sure I'll discover, but you might want to give it a spin yourself if only to get a look at what's to come. Download it for free (for Windows only, sorry) at this link.

UPDATE: Turns out there is a spell check tool, it just doesn't work on all sites/pages right now, which is why I missed it originally.

POLL: Are you into Chrome?

Comments on Hands on with Google's Chrome browser

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  • 27 Posted by nolimit4dons on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:40PM EDT Report Abuse

    See google or what ever name you called your sinking self.You think that the internet is yours.Whenever you hear"Internet" is as if your father's name are called.This Chrome of yours is not better than IE4 talkess of IE8.You cant compete with IE the whole world knows that so cut it short by saing that you want to compete with Safari,firefox.firefox. And please leavae Microsoft alone.If you people like start to compete with zune,windows and xbox to show microsoft that yes you are worth thbe competition but if no then dont try and compete with them is it just because you win them in the Search category doesnt not mean that you are worth them so BEWARE!!!

  • 28 Posted by jeremypage on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:33PM EDT Report Abuse

    It underlines misspelled words but does not give you an option to fix them (at least not that I see).

  • 29 Posted by usama_ah on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:28PM EDT Report Abuse

    Hey Christopher, did you read the EULA? Gizmodo has a post about how if you agree to the EULA for Google Chrome then content created using the browser can be used by Google in anyway they want. So this post for example, could be used by Google and they don't have to pay you any royalty. Also I wanted to ask that you give cred for google's "new tab" page where they show the 9 or so pages in a small thumbnail view to Opera as that was the first browser to do this (they call it "speed dial.")

  • 30 Posted by rogueist on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:49PM EDT Report Abuse

    Google is removing all messages that detail all the spyware / virus / trojan stuff that Chrome does from their Chrome group message boards. I suggest people avoid using Chrome.

  • 31 Posted by sithlord0807 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:25PM EDT Report Abuse

    nolimit4dons - You need to learn some grammar and you need to learn how to spell.

  • 32 Posted by perfctgrl on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:06PM EDT Report Abuse

    oooh, so far i'm totally diggin chrome. i normally use firefox, but i have a special place in my heart for google, so i had to at least try it. : D

  • 33 Posted by smokey7474 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:30PM EDT Report Abuse

    @nolimit4dons. You are obviously an IE user......nice non tuple post. Whats the matter, IE lock up on you? Bet you have 4 anti-virus programs going at once, too. Trying to battle all that IE induced malware? Noob. Anyway, Chrome is nice so far. Definitely a few milliseconds faster loading over firefox, just not enough features for my liking.....yet. Give this puppy another 6 months. Working in IT, I can see myself loading this browser on every one of my customers PCs. Here's to the death of IE! Good riddance to bad rubbish. Cheers!

  • 34 Posted by flabbytubs on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:00PM EDT Report Abuse

    Hi, this is a lot late, and you may have found it yourself already, but there can be a HOME icon. Go to the SCREWDRIVER option on the right, select OPTIONS, then on the BASICS tab right by HOME PAGE, you can choose to show the HOME button on the toolbar. VOILA!

  • 35 Posted by limbu_nabin on Thu Sep 3, 2009 6:52PM EDT Report Abuse

    too many errors I can't even sign in to my you-tube a/c. no videos on some of my fav sites .....I would rather prefer Firefox until chrome isn't a beta at all.

  • 36 Posted by all4nilija on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:50PM EDT Report Abuse

    I absolutely love Chrome. I have been using it for a few months now. I stopped using IE7 and Firefox. I never liked Firefox in the first place. Chrome was quite confusing in the beginning and I did get frustrated. But, I am quite adept at playing around with things and figuring it all out. I like the Home page screen shots. It's like having a favorites bookmark tab but all visible on one screen. No it is not perfect. I still find that some pages and special scripting do not work in Chrome so I have to go to Firefox or IE for them. But I must add, this was far more frequent when I first started using Chrome and has greatly been improved over the months. In all I prefer Chrome over any others. I like its simplicity, and in my opinion it is visually appealing.

  • 37 Posted by draxthedestroyer@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:48PM EDT Report Abuse

    The one thing everyone needs to remember: It's still a Beta version. It emulates (and sometimes blatantly copies) some of the best parts of the three other major browsers. It even pulled Opera's only feature that I ever found useful, SpeedDial, and made it part of the browser. I'd been using this type of feature in Firefox via a plugin, and it's nice to see it as part of the browser itself. All in all it's great for a beta version. It's faster than any other browser I use (or used to use) and has no problems with the web pages I visit most. I am looking forward to version 1.0 with great anticipation.

  • 38 Posted by marebear-70@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:06PM EDT Report Abuse

    Like Chris, I too miss the toolbars, especially Google and eBay! I love the speed and the 'SpeedDial' function though. I'm looking forward to version 1.0 also

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