Googles world is webit sees everything
through this web prism; thats its strength as well as weakness in certain
instances. While the whole world knows that this web giant is working on its PC
OS, dubbed as Chromium (Chrome), it has generated a mixed interest. Microsoft
bashers have welcomed it, but at the same time Linux supporters are viewing it
with caution. While Google till now has kept its PC OS under wraps, it gave an
idea to the open source community by releasing the key build codes to seed
further development recently. From now, the open source community can access the
critical elements of the OS like the code base, user interface experiments, and
initial designs frameworks.
Getting in Shape
While some of the developers have pieced the codes and packaged a bare bone
Chrome OS, it looks like its a long way ahead. The OS is slated for a late 2010
launch, and is expected to drastically alter the netbook market. According to
some tech blogs, by the next year, Chrome based netbooks will come at very cheap
price points; and that eventuality will totally redefine the PC landscape. There
are Chrome OS versions floating in the P2P sites, and one can run the unofficial
user built developer versions of Chrome OS. According to the information
available in the web, to run the Chrome OS build, the users in the first place
need to have a virtual machine like VMwares workstation or Suns virtual box
According to Googles official blog about Chrome OS, "First,
its all about the web. All apps are web apps. The entire experience takes place
within the browser, and there are no conventional desktop applications. This
means users do not have to deal with installing, managing and updating programs.
Second, because all apps live within the browser, there are significant benefits
to security. Unlike traditional operating systems, Chrome OS doesnt trust the
applications you run. Each app is contained within a security sandbox, making it
harder for malware and viruses to infect your computer. Furthermore, Chrome OS
barely trusts itself. Every time you restart your computer the operating system
verifies the integrity of its code."
Google also wants its OS to be fast. As per the information
available, its taking out all the unnecessary processes, and putting a lot of
parallel processing functionality to hasten multitasking as well as boot up and
shutdown times.
While the Chrome OS build release to the open source
community has generated worldwide interest, but at the same time the control
users can have on the OS offline is yet to be seen. Its purely a cloud based
operating system, and dependant on high speed net for most of the functionality
to work. But its too early to predict the further evolution, and the subsequent
market success. Google is trying to open up a new premise in personal computing
landscape with the Chrome OS. But it looks like the users will be tied to a
Google ecosystem that will be meshed tightly with the OS like YouTube, Google
Wave, Gmail, Gtalk, and other services that Google provides.
Likely Impact
Googles key rival, Microsoft had chosen to play its routine scepticism
regarding the new OS, and had said that it can never become a threat to Windows
OS. Even the Linux community is not at the moment really taken aback with the
new Chrome OS build release. But experts say that once Google comes with a
tightly meshed beta version of Chrome, it will set the ball rolling, and the OS
functionality level can be really ascertained. But Google does have serious
competitionapart from Microsoft and Linuxfrom instant on PC platform players
like DeviceVM, which makes Spalshtop.
But at the end of the day, the Chromium released right now
has sent a signal to the proprietary world that Google is very much bent on
changing the rules of personal computing by pushing everything in the ambit of
the cloud. The PC is going to be just a device like a set-top box. Moreover, it
is to be seen whether Chrome will work without a traditional start up BIOS. It
is rumoured that Chromium based netbooks will use solid state disks for faster
start ups. With Google expected to launch this OS in a years time, it looks
like an exciting road ahead for the developer community. Whether Google can
engineer yet another disruptive web development with Chrome OS, will be put to
an ultimate test in the days ahead.
Shrikanth G
shrikanthg@cybermedia.co.in