http://itmanagement.earthweb.com/entdev/article.php/3769271/Google-Chrome-Finally-a-Browser-for-the-21st-Century.htm
Back to article
Google Chrome: Finally, a Browser for the 21st CenturyBy Adrian Kingsley-HughesSeptember 3, 2008 Googles entry into the browser market was unusual to say the least. On Monday, while many in the U.S. were enjoying a well-deserved day off, Philipp Lenssen, a German blogger running Google Blogoscoped, received a package from Google containing a 38-page comic book. This was no usual comic book, though. It outlined the features of a new addition to the Google empire a Web browser called Chrome. Thanks to Google employees not being aware of how international shipping works, Lenssen got the upper hand on this story and broke it to the rest of the world. Yesterday we were all given the opportunity to see this new browser for ourselves when Google made the beta available to all. (And if youve not done so yet, download Chrome.) So, whats the deal with Google Chrome? Well, Im going to start off by coming right out with the hyperbole: The release of Google Chrome will have a significant effect on the browser landscape over the coming months and years. It doesnt matter whether you use Google Chrome or Firefox, Opera, Safari or even Internet Explorer (youre not still using IE as your default browser are you? Shame on you if you are! :-) ). Whatever the case, youll see significant changes in the way you browse the Web as a result of Googles new beta browser. By shipping a beta of Chrome, Google has at a single stroke shown the other players in the browser game how to create a fast, lightweight, easy-to-use browser something that the likes of Microsoft has been working on for years and not even come within arms reach of. Early data from Web metrics company NetApplications suggests that Google Chrome took only a few hours to grab a 1 per cent browser market share, exceeding the market share that took Opera years to achieve. OK, so what is it that makes Google Chrome so special? Well, lets begin by looking at the interface. Take a look at this:
![]() Notice how little clutter there is? Theres a tab strip at the top, theres a few buttons on the toolbar (I count seven) and theres a multi-purpose address/search bar called an Omnibox. Thats it. Theres no menu bar (although two of the buttons do pop out menus, one relating to the current page, the other relating to the browser itself). Theres no status bar and there are no sliding panes or other such clutter. The Google Chrome interface puts the focus on whats important the content of the web page you are visiting. What a novel idea! Walt Mossberg doesnt sound like hes too thrilled about Chrome not having a way to manage bookmarks, a method for emailing links and a progress bar to show you the progress of the page loading. Hmmm, how many people are really making use of browser features such as bookmarks? I certainly dont use bookmarks anywhere near as much as I was doing a few years ago. I have set sites that I visit regularly and the rest I find using a search engine. As for emailing links and progress bars, these do little more than add to the UI bloat of modern browsers.
![]() However, theres a lot more to Google Chrome than just a minimalistic user interface. First off, Google has reinvented the browser tabs. Browser tabs have been with us for some time now but Chrome not only makes them draggable (in that you can drag them out from one instance of Google Chrome to create another instance, and then drag them into another instance of the browser) but tabs also run in separate processes. Why is having the tabs running in separate process important? Well, because it allows each tab to be kept separate from other tabs so a resource hogging (or buggy) Web page in one tab wont have a detrimental effect on other tabs that are running.
|