Here's the skinny on Chrome from those of you who've already taken it out for
a spin:
Chrome is nice...but no dice. After succumbing to the overwhelming buzz
about the browser, I was one of the first in this part of the world to get
my copy. My immediate impression (from using the browser and reading the comic)
is that the Google Chrome team designed the browser for the pages, not for
the humans browsing.
Reload All Tabs (or Refresh All, in IE talk) is missing. Imagine your
Internet connection going off briefly, and you have like 19 tabs open (after
all, memory usage isn't an issue). You will have to refresh each page one
at a time. Also, when Flash crashed in one of my tabs, it crashed in all tabs.
Where is the isolation? "Evil:%" as a link on mouse-over or typed
in the "omnibar" crashes Chrome completely, warranting a restart.
Also, it had a problem handling a certain malicious site I came across.
-Anonymous
I love Chrome. Yes, it is sparse, but it doesn't have the excess baggage
and Band-Aids of 10 years of kludges. Its approach to security, processes
and even compilation of JavaScript are all innovative and it shows. It seems
rather solid for a beta (a shame it used the unpatched version of WebKit as
the MS press hounds are HOWLING about insecurity already).
I imagine that what Google did with Chrome is very similar to what MS
needs to do with Midori: start from scratch based on today's paradigms.
-Rob
I have tried Chrome briefly. One of my home pages is a Microsoft personalized
Live page. I could log into my Live account but the personalized pages would
not display -- it always went to the Live search screen no matter what I did.
I also could not figure out how to get the bookmarks listing to always be
open on the left side of the program as in IE and Firefox. When you have a
wide screen, there's plenty of room to have that open and still have horizontal
space for page display. It did seem faster than IE but about the same as Firefox.
Biggest concern is what Chrome is doing under the covers to track activity
and report back to Google. Call me paranoid but...
-Jim
I gave Chrome a whirl and I've been kind of puzzled by the number of people
that say it is so much faster than other browsers. I did a side-by side comparison
on three of our own sites that are kind of slow and I did not see any appreciable
difference in performance between Firefox 3, IE 7 and Chrome. I did like the
sparse layout so that more of the page shows in the browser, but it wasn't
as big a difference as I thought it would be. Overall, it is a nice browser
but as someone who works at a Web design firm, my main reaction is, "Great,
another browser to test against." Oh well, more work for us.
-Cameron
I tried Chrome on Vista Business and got an execution error. It loaded
the interface but I could not load any pages.
-David
I thought I had a solution in Chrome only to be disappointed
once again. I have two Gmail accounts. Firefox only allows me to have one
opened at a time (I open them both, but when I access one account, the other
one automatically gets signed out). I thought for sure Chrome was the answer
-- especially after reading the introductory comic strip about different access
for each tab and how crashing one would not crash any others. I -- foolishly,
it appears -- concluded that since the tabs were not synched together in any
way, I could open both Gmail accounts and access them without fearing one
would get logged out.
Not so. In Chrome, the same symptom appears when I open both accounts;
accessing one for action signs out the other. Perhaps only one may run from
any single machine? Not the case. I open one in Firefox and the other in Chrome
and both may be accessed in turn without knocking the other offline. My conclusion:
Chrome is smoke and mirrors. Great concept, poor execution. Perhaps I'm not
knowledgeable enough to understand how it works. If all the tabs in Chrome
work independently of each other, how would it know to sign one Gmail account
offline when the other is accessed without knowing that I'm opening both accounts
from the same machine in two different browsers? My head hurts.
-Earl
More
Posted by Doug Barney on September 08, 20080 comments
Regular Redmond Report readers know there's nothing I like better than good,
old-fashioned competition, and now the browser market is showing signs of becoming
a real battleground.
Even before Google made its Chrome play, the competition was already heated.
Recently, management consultancy Janco Associates claimed that IE had only a
58 percent
market share. Oddly, it gave Google Desktop a 4 percent share, even though
that isn't even a browser.
More
Posted by Doug Barney on September 04, 20080 comments
It wouldn't be a Mailbag section without some reader letters about Vista. Brian
starts us off by explaining why his company won't be adopting the OS any time
soon:
For my corporation, I feel it's an unnecessary migration to go from XP
to Vista. The migration plus the learning curve for users is not necessary
since there is little that is tangible lost for us by staying on XP, a now
stable and well-known platform with huge user acceptance. It's a big decision
for a company to commit the resources to migrate. In this vein, management
must see a business-need incentive to approve the leap.
-Brian
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Posted by Doug Barney on September 04, 20080 comments
On
Tuesday
, I gave a sneak preview of Google's browser called Chrome. Soon
after I wrote the item, the download became ready. Matt Morollo, our VP of publishing
here at
Redmond
magazine, wrote to me raving about Chrome and how fast
it was. I also heard from a Redmond Report reader or two who were similarly
impressed.
More
Posted by Doug Barney on September 04, 20080 comments
TNT Software, a veteran in the event log management and server monitoring space,
just
upgraded its
flagship product
-- with an eye toward Vista and Windows Server 2008.
The company actually changed its plans midstream, according to VP of Sales
and Marketing Brent Skadsen.
"Our plan was to rush out an interim build of ELM to support the adoption
of Windows Server 2008 and Vista. Originally, the scope was to efficiently monitor
systems running these new operating systems," he said. "Then, it expanded
to run on the platform. As the project developed, it became clear, supporting
Windows Server 2008 required monitoring 64-bit systems and adding a mechanism
to manage the higher event log frequency. In addition to boosting the performance
and scalability, filtering features were designed to reduce the event noise."
More
Posted by Doug Barney on September 04, 20080 comments
Microsoft has long been jonesin' to be cool. Gates hangs with Bono, the Xbox
gets it into the kids' market, and the Zune (by the way,
here
are the details on some new Zunes) is a clear iPod wannabe.
Redmond also wants PCs to be cool. The Vista Aero interface is definitely slick,
and Microsoft wants hot-looking machines to go along with its hot software.
So who better to design these things than today's top fashion designers?
More
Posted by Doug Barney on September 03, 20080 comments
Readers share their thoughts on the
second
beta of IE 8
, the future of IE in general, and how it holds up against Firefox:
The beta 2 of IE 8 is a significant improvement over IE 7, although still
quite buggy on some sites because of the changes to comply with W3C standards.
I'm just wondering if sites will be willing to change for IE 8 to W3C or mark
as compatible with older versions of IE.
The feature that was the most impressive was the more secure capability
to identify dangerous Web sites such as phishing sites. Checking for dangerous
Web sites is a big jump for IE. In the beta 2 release, they stepped up the
warning message to be sure it is hard to miss. Yet to be seen is whether the
loose coupling helps with performance. The use of Accelerator to invoke a
map is a nice feature. The recoverability feature has limited value for my
use. The changes further place IE 8 as a browser that is trying to catch up
with Firefox along with the many Firefox add-ons, but also likely to keep
IE as a highly popular browser that remains as a corporate standard for most
Fortune 500 companies.
-Joe
I have not seen any reason to use IE over Firefox. I stopped using IE
because it kept crashing (locking up) and I have not had this problem with
Firefox. I have not used IE since V7 first came out so this may not be an
issue today. However, Firefox seems so much more flexible and extendable that
I have never considered going back. And with the new features in Firefox V3,
I just love it even more.
-Wayne
Unless Firefox becomes manageable at some point, it'll always be useless
in a business. With no ability to remotely install, patch, configure and monitor
Firefox, companies that care about security are forced to use IE no matter
which browser they prefer. Hopefully, the new version of IE will catch up
to Firefox's usability and performance advantages.
-Dave
There's no compelling reason to use IE over Firefox, though there's a
compelling reason to use Firefox over IE: The last time Microsoft gained a
monopoly in Web browser usage, it let the product stagnate for years, festering
into a massive security problem and massively slowing the development of the
Web in general.
I'm glad that it has started its photocopiers up again, because Mozilla
and Apple need something to compete against. But Microsoft has proven time
and again that it doesn't innovate, and as soon as its products are "good
enough" that its competitors lose ground, it stops progressing. We need
to make sure it continues to have something to copy.
-Anonymous
In my opinion, IE's share of the browser market is a direct result of
its bundling with Windows. If users had to download it separately, Firefox
(or perhaps some other player by now) would have the commanding lead in browser
market share and IE would be an also-ran at best. Security exploits would
orient around Firefox or whatever browser that happened to be the most popular.
In the past, I've used every available version of IE, Netscape, Firefox
and several of Opera. I've found that each one has had its share of annoying
quirks and agreeable features. I like the fact that Firefox doesn't use ActiveX
and I also like the fact that IE uses integrated Windows authentication. It
all comes down to usefulness. Neither browser is the be-all/end-all platform
by which to enjoy the Internet. IE 8 will be no better or worse; it'll just
be the next version with its set of features and quirks as the all the previous
versions have had.
-Jeff
I think that the big thing missing in IE are plug-ins. Now, I'm not an
expert, and I know that some plug-ins for IE exist, but the one I really miss
is something like Foxmarks. I have four PCs and at least with Firefox all
PCs' bookmarks are constantly in sync.
-Dave
I am happy that Firefox is out there because this forces Microsoft to
make IE a better browser. The features in IE 8 will be a direct result of
this.
The only other Web browser that could give IE a run for its money would
be Apple's Safari. If Apple plays its cards right, it could sneak in Safari
on everybody's PC through the use of all the "i" devices it sells.
-Brian
More
Posted by Doug Barney on September 03, 20080 comments
I lived through the John Scully era at Apple. This long-departed CEO did a few
things wrong (can you say Newton?), but one thing he did absolutely right was
to allow Mac clones. Scully was ultimately let go; Steve Jobs returned and promptly
killed the clones.
There is one feisty clone maker out there: Psystar of Palo Alto. Psystar apparently
has some kind of license for the Mac OS which the company thinks gives it the
right to make clones. Apple, of course, sued. Unexpectedly (at least to me)
Psystar
sued back, claiming that Apple has an illegal monopoly over its operating
system.
More
Posted by Doug Barney on September 03, 20080 comments
Microsoft has a bunch of new TV commercials (no Seinfeld yet) about the Mojave
experiment. Like in the old Folgers commercials, users are shown a new operating
system, love it, and are then told it's Vista.
Some critics bashed the whole thing as a set up, arguing that Vista was running
on super high-end hardware to make it look good. Microsoft
is fighting back, pointing out that Mojave/Vista is running on year-old
HP laptops with just a couple gigs of RAM.
More
Posted by Doug Barney on September 03, 20080 comments
Mention Vista and the critics come out of the woodwork. This week, readers share
their thoughts on why they haven't migrated to Vista:
I read your article in Redmond Report and just wanted to respond. The
main driver for our organization wanting to continue to run XP is the stability
of the OS, minimal issues, and the cost in time and money to replace old hardware.
Today, these older desktop machines run acceptably well with XP, but they
would not meet the hardware requirements for the new OS.
Secondly, we have monitored the issues surrounding Vista and believe we would
be significantly adding to our work load if we migrated. Most organizations
have more work on their to-do list than they have resources to accomplish
them, leaving only the most critical and cost-effective projects to be funded.
The value is not high enough to make the move at a corporate level.
-Jonathan
Even with all the problems we had with the XP SP3 upgrade, I still like
XP a lot more than Vista!
-Tony
I tell all of my customers and clients not to buy anything with Vista
on it. If you really need a new system, look online for machines that still
ship with XP. Often, these are refurbished machines, so the end user has a
tough choice to make: get an antiquated machine with XP or I can de-Vistafy
your machine for you. And people are buying it; there is an actual demand
for this service. What choice does the user have? Try to work with Vista and
pray that any software they buy that isn't explicitly rated for Vista has
a 50/50 chance of working, and you all know the penalty for returning opened
software.
This Vista debacle is beyond belief. Learning Linux, any distro, is easier
than dealing with Vista. The tech support time is so high that it is prohibitive.
The only people who have made money on Vista is Microsoft, and while I have
nothing against capitalism, this is out and out theft. Vista does not work,
and NO amount of patching by Microsoft will ever get it to work with the ease
and finesse of XP Pro. This has to be illegal, but who can afford to sue Microsoft?
-Ari
I work for a school district and we have no plans to move to Vista.
-Anonymous
The poor economy has less to do with our reluctance to go to Vista here
at the City of Eugene, than the fact that there is no perceived advantage
to go to Vista, even with some increase in security. The UAC, with all its
prompting, is seen by management as too burdensome for the users. There is
great reluctance on the part of upper management to force this on our users.
The move to Vista would be costly in having to upgrade many workstations to
1GB or more of memory. Then the departments would see an annoying UAC and
no bang for their buck after buying more memory.
The culture here is "everybody a local admin." With IT already
seen as a cost center, we really don't want to make the departments pay more
money in hardware costs for an annoying OS. There have been suggestions in
upper management that if we went to Vista, we are to rip the UAC out of our
install set. No increase in security with a hardware cost to the users translates
into no Vista for us.
-Robert
After many hours of saving and retrieving ghost images from my XP machine,
I decided to upgrade to Vista. What a big mistake! I have now decided to downgrade
back to XP, because I cannot connect to the Vista machine using NET USE after
many hours of trying, and I am sick and tired of searching for solutions.
It shouldn't be that hard for an experienced IT pro. Computers are supposed
to make life easier, and upgrades are supposed to do just that -- upgrade.
Vista is not ready for prime time.
-Richard
I'm waiting for Vista SP2, hoping that will finally restore the Fax Wizard
that even XP Home had, and that MS, in its infinite wisdom, opted to leave
out of Vista Home Premium. But I'm not holding my breath waiting, and my hopes
aren't high. I'm more likely to go the dual-boot route with Ubuntu, where
a fax printer is just another package that's part of the distribution.
Beats me how Microsoft can think it's encouraging customer loyalty when
it refuses to allow customers to buy the MS products they want.
-Fred
More
Posted by Doug Barney on September 02, 20080 comments
There may soon be more competition in browsers as Google is reportedly
prepping
its answer
to Internet Explorer and Firefox. No real details or features
were available, but the company has apparently been working on this puppy for
a couple of years.
Google must have been reading Redmond magazine. I wrote a column for
Redmond, "The
Barney Browser," in June 2008. My idea was for Google to build a browser
and focus on intelligently storing searches, along with archiving the overall
process of exploration. I wrote: "The Google Barney Browser integrates
searching with a file system so the intelligence that comes from searches can
be organized, used, shared and built upon. Perhaps these strings of pages can
be cached so if the site goes down, the information isn't lost."
More
Posted by Doug Barney on September 02, 20080 comments
Windows admins and IT types are familiar with Patch Tuesday. Every month, Microsoft
publicly releases a bunch of fixes and you or someone on your staff gets to
fixin'.
The Web is a wilder, woollier and perhaps more dangerous world. Researchers
and vendors such as Cenzic have been pointing out how unpatched many Web servers
and apps are. In fact, Cenzic claims that seven
out of 10 sites aren't safe.
More
Posted by Doug Barney on September 02, 20080 comments