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John Brandon's picture
John Brandon

Web 2.0 Watcher

Is Chrome the first epic fail at Google?

In a Computerworld report that summarizes recent Net Applications data, interest in Google Chrome has now died down to a standstill. Most of the people still downloading it are either night owls or from countries outside of the US, such as China, because the only activity is at night. As I mentioned in an earlier post, Chrome searches have now fallen in line with Firefox. This, after a week or hype and unforeseen inmade it seem like Google was going to a) take over the browser market b) usher in the end the OS as we know it and c) probably make Google really rich.

It turns out that Chrome is just another fast browser without any really compelling features that will make people switch once and for all. It may even just be merely a developer tool and not a real browser at all. Yet, there are a few things that have contributed to the flat-lining interest, issues that Google could still fix if they get busy, well - today or sooner.

1. Chrome is relatively stable, but minor irritants such as the undo bug I found make you wonder why you are using it. Chrome is not like a low-level beta app that sort of works and where you put up with bugs because it is so new and innovative. Instead, a browser is the main tool we all use every day, and it better work - we have no patience for buggy browsers like IE.

2. Google has not released an obvious Chrome 1.1 update yet to address bugs, although they have released point upgrades and you can get new versions through a developer program. Huh? A developer program? In Internet time, it has been eons since Chrome was released, and no one wants to figure out how a developer program works just to get a more stable version.

3. There were early concerns over how Google was going to use your private data. They fixed the problem, but a minor glitch at the launch of a social networking site like Lively is nothing compared to a minor glitch with a browser. Everything is more critical and higher profile.

4. Google tends to use very simple anchor pages for their products, but it also makes people think the product is under supported. I'm sure there is a Chrome support forum; the issue is that it is not easy to find and that makes the average user nervous. Are they serious about Chrome? Or was it just an internal browser they used for testing that runs fast and decided to release it publicly? Wait, that's exactly what it is.

5. As Opera has learned, you have to keep the momentum going. Google obviously move don quickly to hype Android and will be in Android mode for some time. Here's the reality check: Google is not Microsoft. They do not have several hundred people working on one product at a time. It's more like a few people or maybe 50. No one knows for sure except Google, but at least on the outside Chrome still seems like an internal project and not a serious product.

6. I wonder where Google can really go with Chrome. For starters, you can't really put advertising on the browser wrapping and on the pages as well. You can tie a search box to advertising, but they already do that with Firefox. It's kind of too late to really beef up the features, and that has never been the goal of Google anyway. Look at Gmail - it is about as barebones as you can get - it runs much faster than Hotmail but has nowhere near as many features. That minimalistic concept works okay with Web software, not as well when it comes to a browser.

7. It's interesting to note that Android is really the first Google product you will be able to hold in your hands - you can literally touch the interface. More importantly, it will be a product you buy - for $180 from T-Mobile. (Google does make an enterprise search appliance but that doesn't really count.) Everything else, including Chrome, is free and in persistent beta.

8. (Updated) Here's one last major issue with Chrome: compatability. I just tried watching a Netflix streaming movie and of course Chrome is not supported. It doesn't work with Movielink or Cinemanow, either. I can imagine that these kinds of sites have no plans to support Chrome, especially when many of them just started supporting Firefox or are still working on Firefox support. As with any software, Web site operators must consider the field: which browser is the most popular?

So will Chrome stick around for years? Probably. But my opinion today is that it rose to quick prominence and then died out just as quickly. It may never come back.


Google Chrome Browser

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What People Are Saying

Rate this
Rated -2
82 Votes

lol @ first epic failure

I guess you guys forgot
1- Google talk
2- Picassa? Ever head of it? It just sucks
3- Compared google docs with zoho docs?

In short, I hate when people think that everything google does is great... Only thing google is good at, is selling us people through their search engine. (Greedle)

Rate this
Rated +2
188 Votes

Chrome not upto the Mark

I think Chrome failed because Google Hurried up a bit, may be because of the new feature of Microsoft Internet Explorer 8 Beta 2 but blocks Adsence.

Rate this
Rated +9
211 Votes

This Chrome is just a start

Google has a great habit of innovating what others have done, and doing it better. I make a point of using it when I can, but I still have to use IE for some stuff (myspace blogging required IE to work correctly).

Part of the problem is how developers have made all their pages so IE centric. It will take a while, but we'll get there.

What google really did with this is set up a framework for the future. Who knows what others might do with this open source browser. Or even google with the next version. I'm sure IE9 will have every feature of this version of chrome in it, but by that point, a newer chrome will be out touting the next generation of coolness.

Chrome definitely doesn't make my computer's brain hurt. The pages don't get stale in memory like IE and grind my plenty fast computers to a halt. It's progress. But just as with most things, you still can't use just one tool to get the job done.

Rate this
Rated +8
222 Votes

Chrome

The Chrome redo feature is a tad slow. You have to redo then click again in the text box.

There are bugs. How, for example, do you add a word to the spell checker for future reference?

I use it as my default browser because it fails better, hitting shift-escape brings up it's own Task Manager, which will let me kill the problem. On the other hand, it hangs in video so much I'm afraid to use it. I switch to IE for running video.

Rate this
Rated +9
291 Votes

Web site operators need to

Web site operators need to make sure that their sites comply with W3C standard, not which browser is the most popular. This is what got us all into the "IE only" mess and you propose to support this abusive habit of Microsoft even longer? Code to standard, people, that is why there are standards. If IE is too broken to display that then tough nuggies! Yea, I know, that doesn't help people who run businesses over the web, but I am convinced that it will take just a matter of weeks until the most popular browser will be one that is standards compatible...and that won't be IE.

Rate this
Rated +5
261 Votes

Agreed, web content designed

Agreed, web content designed to W3C standards should be viewable in any browser. Unfortunately, that is most often not the case.

The issue with Chrome (and other non-IE browser) compatibility is with content like streaming video and other crap that requires plugins, ActiveX and other junk. Content providers and IP lawyers LOVE Microsoft because Microsoft is the on the best at DRM.

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Rated +18
286 Votes

Not Gold, Not Silver, but Chrome.

Its perfect, easy quick no real issues besides the back button, but besides that... nothing, its great.

Rate this
Rated +4
304 Votes

Seriously, Just look at SSL on Google Pages

Chrome doesn't even hand Google's own SSL pages correctly... EPIC FAIL!

Rate this
Rated +1
81 Votes

This is false. If you omit

This is false. If you omit www, the security ccertificate fails. Remember to use www, and go to the proper address. Why don't people do their research? Ever?

It does in firefox as well:
http://i35.tinypic.com/6yo17r.png

Rate this
Rated +2
20 Votes

You shouldn't need www

You can purchase wild card SSL certificates so users don't need to type in WWW, however Google hasn't done that, and therefore should program their own website SSL info into Chrome so Chrome knows it is trusted.

It doesn't matter that it does this in Firefox because Google doesn't make Firefox, and therefore doesn't speak to the incompetence of the Google programmers for overlooking issues to the way their own website works with their browser.