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Google browser can run applications

San Francisco, September 3, 2008

Google is challenging Microsoft Corp with its own Web browser that lets users run many applications that once worked only when installed on local PCs, executives said.

Google introduced a public trial version of its new browser software, Chrome, which is designed to handle not just text and graphics, but more complex computer programs.

Chrome, available in 43 languages in 100 countries at https://www.google.com/chrome, has been designed to download software and Web pages faster than existing browsers. It even allows users to keep working when one of its windows crashes.

This represents Google's long-anticipated head-on attack on Microsoft and its Internet Explorer, which has three-quarters of the Web-browsing market. Google has backed Mozilla Corp's Firefox browser, which holds about 18 percent of the market.

Google engineers and executives call Chrome a 'fresh take on the browser,' a 15-year-old technology that is supplanting 25-year-old desktop software as the basic way users interact with computers.

'You actually spend more time in your browser than you do in your car,' said Brian Rakowski, group product manager for Google's browser project.

Chrome was seen by analysts as partly a defensive move due to Google's fear that the recently upgraded Internet Explorer 8 (IE 8) could be used to lock out Google. Google's core business of Web search and related advertising depends on browsers.

A Microsoft executive said IE 8 gives users control over how and where they navigate, improves their day-to-day browsing experience, and keeps people safe from new security threats.

'Microsoft understands that Web browsing is crucially important for hundreds of millions of people, which is why we invest in Internet Explorer so heavily,' Dean Hachamovitch, general manager of Internet Explorer, said in a statement.

Google co-founder Sergey Brin said Chrome was designed to address the shift to using software from within a Web browser rather than as locally installed computer applications running inside Microsoft Windows or some other operating system.

'I think operating systems are kind of an old way to think of the world,' Brin told a group of reporters after the news conference at Google's Mountain View, California headquarters. 'They have become kind of bulky, they have to do lots and lots of different (legacy) things.'    

Google believes any task done in a standalone desktop computer application can be delivered via the Web and Chrome is its bet that software applications can be run via a browser.

'We (Web users) want a very lightweight, fast engine for running applications,' Brin said. 'The kind of things you want to have running standalone (on a computer) are shrinking,' he said, adding that he still edits photos on his computer rather than using a Web program.

Chrome borrows liberally from other browsers running open-source software code, including Apple Inc and Firefox, and company officials said they planned to fully share Chrome code with other developers.

'We have borrowed good ideas from others,' Google vice president of Product Management Sindar Pichai said. 'Our goal here was to bring our point of view, but do it in a very open way.'    

Because Chrome relies on Apple's open-source WebKit software for rendering Web pages, it can run any application that runs on Apple's Safari Web browser, Pichai said.

'If you are a webmaster, and your site works in Apple Safari then it will work very well in Google Chrome,' he said. Greg Sterling, a Web analyst with Sterling Market Intelligence, said Google's entry into the browser market has echoes of the bruising 'browser wars' of the late 1990s, when Microsoft crus




Tags: Google | Chrome |

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