Google’s Chrome: This baby flies
Published 5:00 am Wednesday, September 3, 2008
- Chrome, Google Inc.’s new Web browser, is shown during a news conference at the company’s headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., on Tuesday.
Google’s much-anticipated new Web browser, Chrome, arrived Tuesday like a shiny new sports car: It’s streamlined, has some great new features and is very, very fast.
Chrome, the most talked-about new tech product since the iPhone, became available shortly before noon as a free download — for Windows only — in what is officially called a beta test version.
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But after a short test drive, it promises to be a worthy contender for alpha browser.
Not that it won’t take some getting used to. Unlike the familiar Internet Explorer and Firefox, which put functions such as print and save at the top, Chrome goes for a minimalist look, with controls hidden under the hood.
Its overall color scheme — after-Labor Day white with sky-blue trim — is a bit harsh on the eyes.
Not everything worked right out of the showroom. Oddly, several Google applications, such as Gmail, didn’t function when we took the beta version out for a spin.
And although the company said it was working on Mac and Linux versions, no release dates were given.
But Chrome’s shortcomings and unfulfilled promises can be forgiven for one basic reason: This baby flies.
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Even on a pedestrian Dell laptop, most pages popped up almost before the finger left the mouse. If Explorer and Firefox are the Toyotas of browsers, Chrome is the sporty Mini Cooper.
Downloading the Chrome beta is painless, and users’ bookmarks, passwords and browsing history get automatically incorporated into Chrome, ready for use.
Among the Chrome features:
•The standard home page is all about you. It includes links to the sites you visit the most and recently added bookmarks.
•At startup, you’re given the chance to pick up where you left off — not just on the last page you visited but also on all the screens you had up when you shut down. Even better, you can tell Chrome exactly which pages you want it to open every time you launch the program. This is especially handy for folks who regularly monitor numerous pages.
•The address bar at the top of the page doubles as the Google search field. For example, you could type www.latimes.com in the space to go directly to the site or type “Los Angeles Times” for a search. It’s a nice, streamlining touch, like the radio controls on the steering wheel.
•Functions such as print and save are hidden under a small pull-down window, thus giving the browser a cleaner look and more room for content. If you don’t like using the pull-down window, those functions can be reached with a right-click on the mouse.
•Like tinted windows, Chrome allows for privacy while cruising the Web. In its incognito mode, sites are kept off the browsing history list.
•If you don’t want to go to the same designated home page every time you start up, you can create several of them as shortcuts that live on your desktop. Click on one, and the browser opens up and takes you there.
All in all, a nice array of features. But what’s likely to make Explorer and Firefox especially nervous is Chrome’s exceptional speed, which could leave the older browsers in rush-hour gridlock as it zooms on by.
Even problems can be amusing to discover.
An error page that cropped up in browsing resulted in this message: “Aw, Snap! Something went wrong while displaying this webpage. To continue, press Reload.”
Who could resist?