Google Chrome OS Is a Direct Challenge to Microsoft in the Netbook Market
Research firm iSuppli is calling Google's Chrome OS a direct challenge to Microsoft's growing market for netbook software. Prime for cloud computing, Chrome OS is targeted at netbooks - which iSuppli expects to see grow to shipments of 36.3 million units by 2012.
Google chief executive Eric Schmidt recently declined to discuss the possibility of a rivalry between Microsoft and Google, which will be shipping a new operating system, Chrome OS, later this year.
Analysts from research firm iSuppli, however, are predicting that
Google is ready to take on Microsoft, and additionally that sales of
netbooks - for now the intended device for the Chrome OS - will more
than triple by 2012.
"Google's launch of the Chrome Web browser served as a preliminary bout
in the company's battle with Microsoft, taking on the market leading
OS, Internet Explorer," said Matthew Wilkins, a principal analyst with
iSuppli, in a July 10 report. "However, with the PC OS version of Chrome, Google is ringing the bell for the main event."
Wilkins continued, "The arrival of the Chrome OS is a direct threat to
one of Microsoft's main revenue streams: sales of the Windows operating
system for netbook PCs. It also comes at a time when Microsoft is on
the eve of launching its most promising operating systems in a number
of years: Windows 7."
Windows is currently the dominant operating system on netbooks, while
Linux, which Chrome is based on, takes a distant second place. Wilkins
explains that the disparity between their positions is largely due to
the lack of a strong Linux brand name.
"For Google to be successful, it needs to promote and position its
brand so that non-tech-savvy consumers will be comfortable buying a
netbook running its operating system rather than one from Microsoft,"
Wilkins said in the statement.
This will be a major challenge for Google, he explained, and would
entail Google establishing deals with OEMs that will put the Chrome OS
name on devices when they ship from their factories. The alternative is
for users to install client software themselves, which is "at
considerable odds with the basic PC knowledge of the typical netbook
user," said Wilkins.
The Chrome OS is a good fit for netbooks, which are light on the
hardware side and primarily meant to connect users to e-mail, messaging
and the Internet. Chrome OS, too, encourages "cloud computing,"
which makes iSuppli senior director and principal analyst Jagdish
Rebello believe it will encourage data usage on netbooks and
notebooks.
"Google's Chrome OS has the potential to drive increased data usage on
netbooks and notebooks in a way that allows operators to monetize this
data traffic," said Rebello in a statement.
"Revenue from broadband access will be a very important component of
the data revenue of total revenues of wireless carriers worldwide.
iSuppli projects that global revenue from mobile broadband access will
grow to more than $180 billion in 2013, up from $61 billion in 2008."
iSuppli reports that it expects worldwide shipments of wirelessly
enabled netbooks - those supporting WLAN, 3G WLAN and Wireless
Metropolitan Area Network (WMAN) connectivity - to reach 17.8 million
units in 2009, 23.8 million units in 2010 and 30.225 in 2011, before
arriving at 2012's predicted 36.3 million units.
In addition to netbooks, Chrome OS is expected to run on netbooks based
on Intel's X86 processor architecture, as well as those using ARM-based
chips.
Other analysts have said they need to see more of the Chrome OS before they believe it will prove disruptive to Windows.









