3 Days of Chrome
I’ve been running Google Chrome for a little while now, and it’s already beginning to supplant Firefox (3.0.x) as my primary browser (Internet Explorer hasn’t been a serious player in my book since Firebird 0.5). There are still a few things that will make me keep Firefox around for a while, yet.
- Extensions - Firefox is the king of extensibility. I just can’t live without adblock, TwitterFox, and FoxMarks. Once reasonable equivalents begin to make thier way in, though. It’s going to be harder for Firefox to hang on to my system.
- Supportability – A lot of sites don’t yet support Chrome, and give the good old “You’re using an unsupported browser, please use one of these…” message, even though the rendering engine is the same as Safari (Woopra’s monitoring script detects Chrome as Safari, even). This is a minor thing that will be fixed in due time.
- Scrolling Issues – Scrolling using the edge of a touch pad, or by middle-clicking on the page are currently not working. This is pretty minor, as most of the time, I’m using a mouse, but it can be problematic when I’m expecting it to work and nothing happens.
- Security – There are a couple of vulnerabilities in the version of WebKit that’s being used in current builds. These have been addressed in later builds, and it will be nice to have them implemented as things progress.
Other than these things, which are really minor for a .2-level product that has been out for 3 days, Chrome is a truly fantastic piece of engineering. I have heard from more than a couple of Googlers that they have been using earlier builds internally for quite a while. It’s nice to know that they eat the proverbial dog food before serving it to the rest of us. It really shows that they are committed to creating something with real quality, usability, and future usability.
One more thing, I think I kind of touched on this in the last post: Chrome (under the Chromium project) is OpenSource, meaning anyone can download all of the code written so far (minus the Google Trademarked stuff), and create their own browser project. It seems that Google is hoping for this to happen, counting on the Open Source community to make improvements and push them back into Google’s development stream.
The next few months are going to be interesting. I can’t wait.