 Chrome's original "primitive" release (Source: Google)
 Yesterday Google aired the final build of Chrome 6.0, a faster, more compatible, more stable browser. (Source: Google)
Browser has become a hit with some customers
"Slow
and steady wins the race" -- that was the motto of the
proverbial tortoise and its seemingly that of Google, as well.
After all Google isn't exactly the first to come to any particular
market -- search, email, browser, smartphone operating system, etc.
-- it just slowly builds in popularity and becomes a formidable force
in each respective market.
Two years ago yesterday Google
launched Chrome -- its first browser. Yesterday it celebrated
that anniversary with the release of the stable sixth
version of its growingly popular browser [download
here].
When Google Chrome first launched many were
skeptical of the effort at best. What did Google, a web
software provider, know about making a successful piece
of desktop software?
The answer, it turns out, was "quite a lot".
Google's
Chrome browser has consistently been the fastest browser (based
on our
own testing here at DailyTech).
It also was among the first to implement sandboxed process for
individual tabs, adding security and stability. What's
impressive on that note is how quickly it turned what was just an
intriguing research
project -- into code in a flagship product.
The road
hasn't always been smooth. As Chrome regulars know, the browser
has had some serious stability and compatibility issues, particular
for those downloading experimental builds. Some days you saw
Google's "Aw, snap!" error message on a far too regular
basis.
However, here it is today sitting pretty in
third place with 7.52 percent market
share -- over twice what it had in October 2009. And
its momentum is continuing.
With Chrome 6.0, Google's tuned up
stability, improved HTML 5 support, improved autofill, offered
auto-translate, and improved syncing remotely with your various
installs. Menus have also been merged into a single all purpose
unified menu, down from two in a previous build. Linux and Mac
support have also been improved.
In months ahead
Google says its biggest goals are to roll out hardware acceleration
(GPU rendering) for its browser (which Internet
Explorer 9 and Firefox
4 feature) and build up its Chrome
Web Store, which Google intends to be the internet's version of
Apple's iTunes App Store.
In short, while Google
currently sits a bit back from top dogs Microsoft and Mozilla, the
best is yet to come. After all, this picture looks awful
familiar -- doubling growth on a year-to-year basis, big veteran
players, and a unique fresh perspective from Google. Android,
anyone?
"We are going to continue to work with them to make sure they understand the reality of the Internet. A lot of these people don't have Ph.Ds, and they don't have a degree in computer science." -- RIM co-CEO Michael Lazaridis
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