Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Chrome - the fastest browser in the West

OK, I got carried away by the title, but Chrome from Google is fast, seriously fast.

Available for download at http://www.google.com/chrome, this browser can seriously challenge IE and the timing looks suspiciously like a gauntlet thrown at Microsoft around the time Internet Explorer 8.0 beta 2 is out for public download.

I am typing this post on Blogger using Chrome and barring a few connectivity issues to the Blogger server and a small blip when it said cookies were disallowed when in fact it was, the browser is purring along just fine, thank you.

The first thing that strikes you after you do the rather quick download and install is the clean and minimalistic interface. This is what a clean browsing experience should look like IMHO. The Settings and the Page control icons are at the top right and the Google logo is visible only when you run it in default mode, maximize it and there is no logo. This is a refreshing change.

Tabbed browsing is supported by default and in a rather cool manner, thumbnails of frequently visited sites are displayed when you open a new tab. No more trying to figure out the site you visited from the history folder.

Another option which I found interesting is the incognito window, which allows you to launch the browser in a mode that prevents any history from being maintained of your visit. Now what would I do with that. Hmm.

The settings page is clean and uncluttered with minimal options and the ability to change the settings and view of just the tab your browsing and not of the entire browser experience, neat.

The language encoding is extensive with support being offered for languages like Thai and Cyrllic. I'd rather use Auto-Detect.

The most stand out feature for me so far has been the speed at which pages load, I have seen reviews on ZDNet and a few other sites which compare various browsers, but I'd take those with a pinch of salt. Developers have been optimizing for browsers for a long time now and a new browser is going to take time to gain acceptance.

Microsoft is the undisputed leader in the browser space, commanding a huge share simply by virtue of being the default on the most popularly distributed operating system. It remains to be seen if Google can catch up and overtake FireFox and then take on Internet Explorer.

The lines are drawn and the battle for the control of your interface with the Web begins in earnest.

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