@GunslingerBara: what is wrong with windows 7?
And you can have a successful product despite making mistakes. IE6 dominated the market, the fort model T was the only car anyone would buy for some time. If you intentionally disallow choice because you believe your way is best, then people will leave you for alternatives as soon as alternatives show up.
The apple iPad is an apple product, apple fanatics would buy anything that steve jobs tells them to. Google doesn't have steve jobs.
Nothing is wrong with Windows 7, I was just pointing out that Windows 7 sometimes is not consistent in where things are or where to find them. This is coming mostly from a developer point of view.
Google Chrome is the best browser on the market for me. Not as a so-called "secondary" browser but as a primary.
Why? Because it is a superior experience for me than Firefox, Opera, Safari, or IE. As a tablet OS, I feel it will be a superior experience for me than the iPad, Android, webOS, BlackBerry, or Windows 7.
I took umbrage at your presumption and fixed it for you. Utility, as ever, remains in the eyes of the user and the market to determine. Personally, while I like the features that sell the browser for you, I so cannot stand the bookmark handling that it will not grace my PC or any hardware I own for the forseeable future. It is fast. It is well designed. It is beautiful and minimal. It also slows my workflow down such that it's a no-sale for me. Saving 0.008 seconds of load time doesn't get back the seconds lost opening the flyout menu for each new webpage I want to open, sometimes numbering in the dozens when I'm busy researching.
Google Chrome is the fastest browser on the market (not just for initial load, but javascript speed, rendering, extensions, etc.). It is also the most secure, has the easiest extension model (even though it is in it's infancy), and has a much faster development cycle than the others. Those are not opinions, these are facts, proven time and again. If those things don't make it the best browser in the market, then tell me what Firefox or any other browser does that makes them better? Also, from my experience, Chrome saves much more than just 0.008 seconds. Add more than a couple of extensions or one hard-hitting extension (like firebug) and Firefox crawls. The same does not happen to Chrome.
But my guess is we may all be running 'cloud' OS's in 5 years anyway
Every OS will have a cloud version in their newst itiration... but I wouldn't say most of us will be using it
Windows 7 and below don't magically poof out of existence when a cloud based windows 8 is released.
As to Chrome OS? I sorta really dislike having Google see 'everything' that i do, which isn't too wild or elaborate, but still, Google's apparent total 'Don't Get It' attitude about privacy makes me look at almost anything but Chrome.
Oh yea... like when they auto subscribed you to buzz (and auto friended you with people from your contacts... so each of them could see anyone ELSE on your contacts who uses chrome and was thus also auto buzzed...), or when they decided to add new sync options to chrome beyond bookmarks, you get auto subscribed to those if you were already syncing it, or where google CEO said "well, privacy isn't a problem if you have nothing to hide" in reply to the ubrage people took at their buzz privacy issues. etc.
Just one more reason why chrome is a tertiary browser for me. I can deal with some lack of privacy though, I just keep in mind that google is always watching.
I believe that quote was taken completely out of context. There was another article on it (which, unsurprisingly, didn't get as much attention) but I can't seem to find it. Yes, privacy is an issue, but these are all companies, who can you really trust? Want to know why I have more faith in Google than the rest? Because they're the only ones with a "don't do evil" policy. Can Microsoft, Mozilla, or any other company claim that? No. Every single time Google has done something that breaks the "don't be evil" mantra (such as the china stuff and the wifi stealing), they've been called out on it and Google has had to rethink what they're doing (to the point of saying screw you to an entire country and pulling out, can Microsoft, Mozilla, or Apple claim that?).
It's easy to say that there are privacy issues with Google, because they control a lot of the world's information. But show an example of where Google has taken advantage of their power. I bet you'll find it hard to do so.
If you disable the Adobe PDF plugin in about:plugins and enable the Google one they work fine. I don't know why Google hasn't enabled it by default, but I'm sure they have their reasons. I can't actually figure out what those are, mind you...
I believe they enable a feature after it's been tested for a few versions (both privately and publicly, hence the about:plugins option).
Bara