Well, I read the whole comic book about all the great features and I focused on the process separation and memory mgmt and tried to follow the stuff about the new VM. It all sounds good, sounds like the way I'd do a browser if I knew how to do such a thing, but I have to say that I thought that Firefox was working on doing these things in v. 2 and 3. You know, work to crash less and fix memory leaks. Anyway, this explains why Firefox still crashes and takes everything with it. Google Chrome should not let one tab w/ a problem bring the whole browser crashing down.
Brian Kelsay
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From: Nathan Cerny Sent: Wednesday, September 03, 2008 11:43 PM
While that was interesting, most of the points were moot. Yes, almost everything in chrome is something someone else has already came up with. But chrome took all the good points from all these other browsers and created a browser that implements them all well.
And this site seems to imply that chrome should be running far more resource-dependant than the other browsers out there - I have been running it since it's release yesterday, and I am very impressed. It outperforms IE7 in all aspects...and IE7 outperforms firefox 3 in all aspects (I was shocked too when I realized it). Of course, this is all on my computer at work, because I run only linux at home ;)
Overall, chrome is an amazing browser with a lot of very well-implemented ideas. The ideas themselves are not revolutionary, but the implementation is...just like what gmail did to email, chrome is doing to browsers.
My 2 cents :)
On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 8:20 PM, Luke -Jr [email protected] wrote:
http://www.osnews.com/story/20244/Google_Chrome_Considered_Harmful/page1 / Also, as far as the Linux version goes... they haven't even decided what toolkit they'll be using. The current code is all "windows.h"