Wed Jul 8, 2009 12:51PM EDT
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In what is certain to be the biggest tech story of the summer, Google is finally making official what has been rumored for years: It will create its own computer operating system, Chrome OS, slated for release in late 2010.
While the news is stunning in its potential impact on the industry, it hardly arrives without warning. Google already makes its own cell phone OS, the fledgling Android, which continues to slowly gain devotees. And well before the company unleashed its own web browser, Chrome, many had long since assumed that Google had been preparing to release an operating system. When the Chrome browser was released instead, many observers actually saw it as a bit of a letdown in the news department.
Now it's clear what Google has been up to all along: Chrome is simply the centerpiece of a larger table setting, a full-blown operating system that will run without Windows or the MacOS beneath it.
Google is keeping many details close to the vest -- and, with at least a year before the OS comes out, it really has no choice since the OS has miles to go before it's ready -- but the company has made a few details public. Chrome OS will be open source, like Linux operating systems, upon which Chrome will be based; it will be designed to be "fast and lightweight, to start up and get you onto the web in a few seconds;" and it will be designed with security in mind (though, seriously, everybody says that). The OS will run on both ARM and x86 CPUs, the latter being the most common PC chip architecture on the planet, used on virtually every PC produced today.
Despite the hints about Chrome OS, many, many questions remain. Obviously Chrome is designed with the web in mind, and it will undoubtedly be closely tied into Google's extensive suite of services. But what will its offline components look like, if any? With Linux as a base, it will obviously be able to run Linux-based applications, though it won't be compatible with Windows... or will it? Emulator systems exist that could let Chrome run Windows apps, but they're complex and at odds with the goal of creating a streamlined, super-simple operating system. I am immediately curious as to how big of a hard drive a Chrome OS laptop would have, if it will have one at all.
Another big question involves the hardware this operating system will run on. Google obviously has inexpensive, low-power netbooks in mind for Chrome OS, but will tinkerers be able to install it on computers they already own? Driver issues become a major obstacle at that point, as a "simple" OS can't possibly account for the thousands of hardware variations present in modern PCs (printing alone is going to be a headache as it is). My hunch is that a downloadable version will eventually be available, but that it won't be supported by Google at all should you decide to install it on a non-approved PC.
That leads to the question of whether Google is ignoring a key part of the market. Netbooks are great little toys, but they're hardly the tools of choice for those looking to get real work done. By embracing the web and largely ignoring offline applications, Chrome-based netbooks will by necessity remain tools for the low end of the market, playthings for when you're not really being productive. Like the Linux-based netbooks before them, they just won't do enough for many users.
And that's an ominous issue hanging out there for Chrome OS's future. Linux-based netbooks haven't been a rousing success, as Windows fought back with a vengeance after they hit the market, offering buyers a more familiar working environment and compatibility with their other computers while keeping prices down. Consumers have so far warmed up to the idea of having more features on their netbooks, not fewer, relegating Linux on netbooks to the background. Will a spiffy, Googleized version of Linux change consumer opinion? Maybe, but probably not dramatically.
Contrary to public opinion, everything that Google touches does not turn to gold, and to be frank, Google has a serious uphill battle ahead for its OS ambitions. I'm cautiously optimistic that Google will put something brilliant together here, and can't wait to get my eyes on the software, but the challenges it faces are extreme. Put together something too unique and different and consumers may be put off and confused. Or you could make an OS that clings closely to the Windows interface, but what would be the point of that?
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
So this sounds like just another distro of Linux, then..
GOOD ONE. KEEP UP.
I like many of the google prodoucts to acertain extent, but an operating system would have to be something else.
Google.com(munist).
Excellent analysis!
This isn't a *new* OS, it's new lipstick on Linux, which is an old OS. From what I've read on it, the only thing this has going for it is that it will be entirely browser based which means you can only use web-browser versions of applications. This will be a niche market toy and won't be much of a threat to Microsoft until two things happen: 1. The entire world lives competely online. 2. People trust Google enough to host their data and have that data available 24 hours a day. Given the recent outage that Google suffrered with their online storage, I don't see this becoming anything more than media noise.
Chrome internet is the best imo can't wait for OS
"Obviously Chrome is designed with the web in mind, and it will undoubtedly be closely tied into Google's extensive suite of services." Google better be carefull! It's exactly this type of 'bundling' that got Microsoft into so much trouble.
Wow...another flavor of Linux....Like we don't have enough of those to choose from..It will probably be a window manager very much like xfce. However they do intend to do for linux what Apple did for BSD. This could take Linux to the next level, pending the community is willing to help make this project go.
Windows has been stuffed down the throats of all of us for years...personally I use Ubuntu (Linux)...while it is not mainstream it has keep me away from the blue-screen-pop-up King for years! Google knows that Windows has millions of "ex-users" in waiting. Once a mainstream open source - not patent brain dead- operating system is available Windows will slowly become a thing of the past (why do you think Bill jumped ship?). Oh...by the way...Chrome is cool.
As a music producer - I would like to know if it would be able to run multimedia programs...whether they be linux, Mac or Windows...It would be cool if they could do a pro tools type of thing...peace/mellosonic
Windows isn't bad. Google hoards your personal info, searches, etc. for millenia. I certainly put anything from goole on my PC. Ever.
Lets wait for the release ..... its too early to comment!!!
I'm pretty much against anything that has to do with Google. Google is becoming too big. Pretty soon you won't even be able to turn on your computer without seeing GOOGLE everywhere you look.
are Google Earth, SketchUp and their other user apps (i.e. the whole Google Pack) available for it? If not, I'd fail to see the point. Does MS make any products exclusively for Mac of Linux?
Uh, yea ... We have 10,000 computers that runs Vista. I'm going to buy 10K license of Chrome & on my lunch time, I will upgrade the computers...
They might as well just join the Ubuntu community and build apon it and mold it to the way they want it just as Linux Mint has. Or better yet, jump on board with React OS http://www.reactos.org/en/index.html and boost them from being an open source design of Windows® XP/2003 (that is based on linux) to windows 7. That would bring microsoft down.
Uniqueness will be the purpose why I use a thing. I can use any OS depend on how my works will be done well.
Uniqueness will be the purpose why I use a thing. I can use any OS depend on how my works will be done well.
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46 Posted by lmoniz7476 on Thu Jul 9, 2009 10:05AM EDT Report Abuse
I like google chrome...It doesn't freeze you can clear your data before you exit, it actually runs faster than Internet Explorer & Mozilla Firefox...