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    Google Chrome OS review: First Look

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By Benny Har-Even, 26 Nov 2009

Rating: $rating

We review a compiled version of Google Chrome OS to get a taste of what the new operating system has in store for us.

The only other signs of the OS are on the right in the form of small tabs for the battery level of your machine, turning wireless on and off and basic OS settings. From here you can actually tell the Chrome browser to use a different default search engine, with Yahoo and Bing the choices, which seems like fair play.

Remarkably, there’s also an option to ‘make Chromium my default browser’, which would imply that you could use something else if you wanted. As such we went off to try and install Firefox but, as you can see from our screen shot, we got rather unexpected results.

install_firefox

In virtual mode there’s not at this point a lot else to see. Flash-based video works, but as it’s running in a VM, it’s too slow to use.

If you want to get technical, (and you’ve come this far so why not), you can enter File:// to see the file system, and press Shift-space to see memory usage.

We’ll continue to play and try out the USB based version, as in a virtual machine it’s not possible to experience that sense of speed that Google is aiming for. However, one does get a sense of it though from the speedy boot times and it’s hinted at from the stripped down approach.

We can see how this will work for netbooks, and those who spend most of their time online, but that isn't everyone right now. As it stands, it's hard to see this as the business OS of the future.

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4 comments

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Speed...

I installed it on my iMac under VMWare Fusion 3.0. It took around 12 seconds to boot on that (2.2Ghz C2D, 2GB RAM, with the VM having 768MB and both cores to play with). It was incredibly slow, I also have Ubuntu 9.10 in a VM (512MB RAM and 1 core allowed) and Firefox in Ubuntu flies compared to Chrome OS! So much for less code offering more speed! It is very picky in Fusion - as well as "bridged", I needed to specify which adapter, Automatic won't work! Also, if you forget to bridge or you don't select the adapter, you need to rebuild the VM. If Chrome OS doesn't find a working network on first boot, it will never find a working network, no matter what you do to the VM settings! I think I had to rebuild the VM 3 times before it found the network adapter. Chrome OS also seems to get confused if you jump out of the VM and come back again, a couple of times the Ctrl key got "stuck"... It is an interesting experiment, but I think it is ahead of its time, we need better network availability and more reliability. I like the cloud, but I wouldn't trust my data to it, alone. I use a hybrid. I have 3 machines I use regularly and they are all synchronised over the cloud, but the data doesn't sit only in the cloud. A web browser is fine, but some things (Email, chat, Twitter, Office etc.) are still better with "fat" clients. The Web experience needs to improve somewhat (and maybe move beyond HTML), before it will be an adequate replacement for ALL fat apps. For an easy to use web browser based machine, it will be fine. For full blooded working environments, it has a way to go - there an RDP or Citrix thin client is still a better bet...

By big_D on Friday Nov 27

4 people out of 5 found this comment useful.

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ummm...

takes less than 4seconds for my system to load it. from time I press power to splash. I've only tried it on a fast machine and I also didn't need to set bridged adapter... it just worked. It is very, very limited and about the only time I'd ever use it as it stands - on a pc I mean - is if I was travelling and wanted to use a secured computer to access the internet - plug in the USB and go. Or if I want someone to use one of my computers with sensitive info to access the net only.

By IhamMhee on Friday Mar 19

2 people out of 2 found this comment useful.

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Are we ready for this?

I'm still undecided. Check out my post for some more insight on ChromeOS: http://whatsnottaken.wordpress.com/2011/01/21/are-you-ready-for-chromium-os/

By bsilverop on Friday Jan 21

0 people out of 0 found this comment useful.

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Looks interesting

http://whatsnottaken.wordpress.com/2011/01/21/are-you-ready-for-chromium-os/

By bsilverop on Sunday Jan 23

0 people out of 0 found this comment useful.

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