Comments on: ARM chip camp sees Google Chrome as opportunity
Texas Instruments and Qualcomm executives talk about the opportunities they see with the Google Chrome operating system.
Texas Instruments and Qualcomm executives talk about the opportunities they see with the Google Chrome operating system.
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Brooke Crothers has served as an editor at large at CNET News, an editor at Dow Jones' Asian Wall Street Journal Weekly, and a senior editor at InfoWorld. His CNET blog covers chip technology and computer systems, and how they define the computing experience. He also contributes to The New York Times' Bits and Technology sections. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.
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Nothing new here, just talk. We shall see.
I personally don't want a computer that ONLY works when connected.
Mentioning Apple - every one is talking about the Google/Microsoft competition but it seems to me that for months there have been rumors of a Apple tablet/MID/Netbook that should it arrive seems ready to leverage the success of the iPhone/iPod Touch and we have already seen how successful they are.
Microsoft shows no sign yet of playing the nimble game that Apple has been doing in the small device area and at least some of the iPhone growth has been at the expense of Windows Mobile. It is too early to write Microsoft out of the game but they have already shown their dominance in the desktop era is less secure in the small device area and they do not appear to innovate at a great enough rate to turn that around so far.
Apple, on the other hand appears to be offering solutions so far that people like in small devices and if they can carry that over to a MID I suspect that the real competition will be between Google and Apple. I am sure Apple is not too pleased with the prospect of a Google OS because I think they know that Google is much more likely to think different than Microsoft is likely to and as such Google could be a more fearsome opponent, especially if it displaces Microsoft quickly. It might be a case where Apple under its breath quietly wishes Microsoft well in this potential battle :-)
In the past year, I think my MacBook has left the house twice. I found that my iPod touch is really all I need when I'm away from my house (this includes short trips out of town).
One thing I do understand is that the World Wide Web is not always the best way to access the Internet.
I currently access the following without touching a browser: e-mail, maps, news, weather, stocks, video (YouTube and other content, including live streaming), sports (scores and video), TV and movie schedules, social networks, maps, music (streaming audio from a variety of sources), transit schedules, restaurant reservations, voice mail.
For pocketable devices, the browser is not the best platform, not by a long shot.
I'll be interesting to see how this middle ground (the stuff between the iPhone and a notebook computer) shakes out, but these smartphones (as well as my iPod touch) are already so useful that there isn't much of a gap to bridge between these little devices and true notebook computers.
The other hand can be doing something else, whether it be carrying a bag, writing, or holding a beverage.
iTunes proved it well and later the iPhone. I think netbooks are seen as cheap laptops and I think inpired by the XO laptop. Once a netbook doesn't do cheap anymore, then a laptop would be the better choice. A touch device that's very portable and a laptop seen the more appropriate mix.
As far as tablets go I think they are just a whim. I have not really used the touch screen capabilities only to scare/annoy my friends when they play with the mouse, and all of a sudden the cursor jumps when i touch the screen. Other than that i found it useful in presentations and showing pictures.
Before someone starts saying about fingerprints on the screen my iPod touch picks up any fingerprint, while the tablet does not seem to get them unless you just applied lotion on your hands. Yes, i tried :)
A rapid shift to web apps could be VERY positive for app developers. Without any porting effort, HTML5/JavaScript/CSS-based apps will run on:
1. any OS (Windows, OS X, Ubuntu, Chrome OS, Android, ...)
2. any device type (smartphones, netbooks, notebooks, desktops, eReaders, photo frames, ...)
3. any CPU architecture (x86, ARM, MIPS, ...).
Presumably, the Chrome OS will support something like BONDI, to provide JavaScript interfaces to a device's resources (camera, accelerometer, GPS, etc.).
I would also expect the Chrome OS to support something like Native Client (NaCl), to enable the development of processing intensive web apps (e.g. games, simulations, etc.).
Things are getting REALLY exciting, these days! I can't wait to see where all of this leads us!
- by tipoo_ July 9, 2009 9:06 AM PDT
- Cnet should do a comparison between all the major ARM based chips out there.
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- by Jorge618 July 21, 2009 2:48 PM PDT
- I agree with tipoo_ there are several chip makers than are working on ARM processors.
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