by millionairemind » Wed Sep 03, 2008 7:07 pm
First impressions of Google’s new browser
By Tim Bradshaw, Digital Media Correspondent
Published: September 3 2008 10:11 | Last updated: September 3 2008 10:11
Google denies that the Tuesday release of its internet browser, Chrome, was a competitive strike against Microsoft, as many commentators have suggested.
No, it simply wants to encourage more people to use the web, more often, instead of outmoded means of communication such as the telephone. For that, it says, speed is of the essence, and Google Chrome certainly shines in this respect.
But Chrome lacks that single knockout feature that one might expect from a browser two years in development at one of the world’s leading web companies. Indeed, many of its features are already available in other browsers – although bringing the best of those into a single piece of software is a useful achievement.
I have tested Google Chrome on a mid-range office PC running Windows XP. A fuller assessment can only really come from heavy daily use, and this is – inevitably – only a “beta†or test version, the same status that Google has kept Gmail in for several years. But with that in mind, here are some early impressions.
First, the most important part – browsing the web. Opening regular web pages on Google Chrome is noticeably faster than the most widely used versions of its competitors, Mozilla Firefox 2 and Microsoft Internet Explorer 7. Pages load in a heartbeat, and navigation backwards and forwards between previously viewed pages is also slick. It doesn’t feel quite the same leap forward as the 2004 launch of Firefox, which seemed a lot faster than the IE, but back then the browser market had lacked the invigoration of competition for some time.
Chrome’s speed gap over the very latest releases of Firefox (version 3) and IE (version 8) narrows, but I still feel Chrome has the edge in most cases.
Where Chrome is really designed to improve on its rivals is in showing complex web pages, such as Google’s own Gmail, Docs and Maps. These, along with Facebook and Yahoo’s Flickr photo sharing site, are supposedly boosted by V8, a technology developed by Google’s Danish team to help the browser process Javascript, a programming language common in such applications.
Google’s own demonstrations of its browser has suggested that Chrome is around three times faster than its main rivals at rendering Javascript. But to the naked eye, there is little improvement in zooming in and out of Google Maps or opening emails in Gmail. If anything, Firefox is actually slightly smoother.
It is hard to test some web sites using streaming video, because of compatibility problems. This is to be expected for a brand new browser, but an impediment nonetheless.
There are a number of interesting features introduced by Chrome. Among them is the “incognito windowâ€, which enables anonymous browsing. Ironically, this is the same privacy feature that Microsoft added to IE8, which many interpreted as a way to block Google from collecting information for its display advertising.
Chrome is named after the area at the top of a browser screen which contains the address bar, tabs, settings and navigation buttons – which Google says is another key area of development. By “hiding†some lesser-used features, this area is narrower, leaving more room to show the web page.
When Chrome first starts, you are presented with a set of pictures of recently or commonly viewed sites – like an automated version of the “speed dial†function of another rival browser, Opera.
Tabbed browsing, also pioneered by Opera, has been improved by Chrome: tabs run along the very top of the screen and each contains its own address bar, back and forward buttons and other key commands.
As well as providing more flexibility for multi-taskers, this is also designed so that if one crashes, you don’t have to close the entire browser – a common problem when more than a few tabs are open in Firefox.
Google has consolidated the separate search box, employed by Firefox, IE and Opera, into the main address bar. The result is a cleaner, more intuitive interface. The simplification has removed the usual menu items of File, History, Bookmarks and so forth, which are accessible through the address bar, by a keyword search.
In this respect, Chrome is similar to Firefox 3.0’s new “awesome barâ€, which automatically suggests bookmarked or previously visited pages as you begin to type.
This is a good concept, although Chrome lacks the fairly basic ability to sort bookmarks into folders or browse a list of your browsing history. Firefox’s version is also more sophisticated in one respect. Typing a word into the main address bar and hitting return takes you straight to the site which is highest ranked by Google for that search term. The latest version of Firefox can even look at your bookmarks and browsing history to help you quickly arrive at your desired destination. But typing a search word in Chrome’s address bar will only take you to a page of Google results.
Finally, while Chrome isn’t perfect, its main contribution to its stated mission of making the web easier to use for everybody may be the decision to give away all of the Chrome source code for free. This will allow programmers around the world to improve on Google’s own attempt at creating an internet browser.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008
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