Comments on: Why the later launches of Chrome for Mac, Linux?
Google made a calculated bet on Windows for its initial browser release, but it might have made more strategic sense to start with versions for the Mac and Linux operating systems.
Google made a calculated bet on Windows for its initial browser release, but it might have made more strategic sense to start with versions for the Mac and Linux operating systems.
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Which browser is the less standard-compliant? Internet Explorer! (IE8 even works bad in Windows 7, see Ars Technica review!)
Mac users have Safari/Firefox/Opera.
Linux users have Firefox/whatever...
Although Firefox has gained a lot of traction on Windows, MS is still strong. So, a bigger name must push the line!
I'm a Mac user. I would like to use it now. But I'm almost fully (and fast) served with Safari and Firefox.
Also, why would you need to introduce a "disruptive" browser to a "disruptive" OS? It's preaching to the choir.
Google Chrome is already on Acid 3 and they're working on an extensions feature to rival Firefox.
IE 8 beta 2 just manages to get the first part right, and then tacks on a sorry attempt at extending functionality called accelerators (yea it's nice, but the sad part is the feature could be recreated in a Firefox extension).
And if Google saw Windows as the best operating system in the world, they wouldn't be using Linux for their servers, or would they be supporting Ubuntu, or have created Android, etc...
Of course, Chrome is just spyware so who cares how well it is written?
- by InsaneNinja January 12, 2009 9:13 PM PST
- The obvious reason is that they are more concerned with getting more market share out from IE. Since any webkit (safari) browser is already upgraded enough to present their javascript systems faster.
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