Google introduces its new Google Chrome OS, an operating system project separate from Android and targeted at PCs -- from, initially, small netbooks to full-size desktop systems, the company said. The move is a boon for Web developers, as the Web is the development platform for Chrome OS applications.Google has introduced its new Google Chrome OS,
an operating system project separate from Android and targeted at
PCsfrom, initially, small netbooks to full-size desktop systems, the
company said.
Just nine months after Google released its Chrome browser last
Septemberwhich Google says has about 30 million usersit has announced a new operating system project, just as some
observers predicted it would.
Google Chrome OS: Erstwhile Microsoft killer? Read more here.
In a late evening blog post on July 7, Sundar Pichai, Google's vice
president of product management, and Linus Upson, engineering director
at the search giant, said Google sought to build an operating system
designed for the Web because "the operating systems that browsers run
on were designed in an era where there was no Web." So Google came up
with the Google Chrome Operating System, which is "a natural extension"
of the company's Google Chrome browser, the duo said.
According to the blog post:
"Google Chrome OS is an open-source, lightweight operating system
that will initially be targeted at netbooks. Later this year we will
open-source its code, and netbooks running Google Chrome OS will be
available for consumers in the second half of 2010. Because we're
already talking to partners about the project, and we'll soon be
working with the open-source community, we wanted to share our vision
now so everyone understands what we are trying to achieve."
The Google duo listed speed, simplicity and security among
the core design themes for the Chrome OS. "We're designing the OS to be
fast and lightweight, to start up and get you onto the Web in a few
seconds," the blog post reads. "The user interface is minimal to stay
out of your way, and most of the user experience takes place on the
Web."
In addition, Pichai and Upson said Google Chrome OS will run on both
x86 and ARM chips. And Google is "working with multiple OEMs to bring a
number of netbooks to market next year," the blog post said.
Describing the software architecture, Pichai and Upson put it
simply: "Google Chrome running within a new windowing system on top of
a Linux kernel."
The Google move is an obvious boon for Web developers, as, simply
put, the Web is the platformthe ultimate developer's playgroundfor building applications for the Chrome OS.
According to the Pichai and Upson post:
"All Web-based applications will automatically work and new
applications can be written using your favorite Web technologies. And
of course, these apps will run not only on Google Chrome OS, but on any
standards-based browser on Windows, Mac and Linux, thereby giving
developers the largest user base of any platform."
Dion Almaer,
co-founder of Ajaxian.com and co-director of the Mozilla Developer
Tools Lab, said in a blog post: "This is great news for Web developers
of course. The Web as a platform continues to push outwards, and we can
use our skills to reach more and more folks out there."
For its part, the Google team acknowledges that there may be some
overlap between Android and the Chrome OS, and some observers say they
fear this could cause problems. But the Google team says it won't.
"While there are areas where Google Chrome OS and Android overlap,
we believe choice will drive innovation for the benefit of everyone,
including Google," the Google duos post said.
Meanwhile, Almaer, a former Google employee, gently chided the
company for its pre-announcement of a technology that appears to be in
its early stages. Said Almaer:
"It is interesting that Google pre-announced this so far in advance.
Google is very different from other companies, that normally hold back
for a release. They instead come out and tell you what they are doing
(sometimes) and promise to open source it :)"
Yet, "There is a reason that we wont see the fruit of this labor
for awhile though, and that is because there is a ton of work to be
done," he added. "I am excited to see us all come together to push the
Open Web platform further and get to a point where it can do everything
we need to create compelling user experiences!"
| | Reader Comments: Google Introduces the Chrome OS | | >>> Post your comment now!
| | business and gravity lawThe higher you fly, the harder the fall. The one who grabs too much, holds too little Posted At: 07-29-09 By: bill | | | | | | Potential?I feel that this Chrome OS could potentially be a competitive rival with mac - simple, fast, and (drumroll please) affordable.... Posted At: 07-17-09 By: Johanberth | | | | | | Compatibility?Secuity?The ultimate questions for the user are its compatibility with existing programs and its vulnerability to the same malware threats assailing the... Posted At: 07-14-09 By: John Kozlowski | | | | | | It may be just a GUIon top of Linux, but it's likely to be the best
GUI around. To me that seems like a real accomplishment. Posted At: 07-12-09 By: Anonymous | | | | | | New OS= Good!It sure will interesting to see just how this works.
Hopefully, it will have local apps as well as cloud apps.
I for one won't bash MS or Apple,... Posted At: 07-11-09 By: tom | | | | | | One can always have hope...One can always have hope...that this OS will have operate better than MS OS and really place some much needed competition in the market place than... Posted At: 07-10-09 By: Arleez | | | | | | A user comment on this articleSheesh folks. Give Google, Microsoft, Apple, etc a break. A majority of you trashing the different companies are parroting what you have heard from... Posted At: 07-10-09 By: DW | | | | | | >>> Post your comment now! | | | | | |
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