Google's new OS will be built on top of the Linux Kernel... with an aim of
being much faster and lightweight... so what about its relationship with the
mac?? this is what I found out;

Most of the discussion <http://www.techmeme.com/090708/p4#a090708p4>
around Google’s
just-announced operating system, Chrome
OS<http://deals.venturebeat.com/2009/07/07/google-preparing-to-launch-a-pc-operating-system/>,
has focused on the threat Google poses to Microsoft. But while Google vs.
Microsoft is the big story (given the dominance of Microsoft Windows), and
it has the most dramatic juice, I can’t help wondering how the move will
affect another important Google relationship — its alliance with Apple.

After all, Google and Apple’s boards share two directors, Google chief
executive Eric Schmidt and former Genentech chief executive Arthur Levinson.
The arrangement made sense when Google was all about the web and Apple was
all about computers and other personal electronic devices. But as Google’s
ambitions grow, that relationship is even starting to draw federal scrutiny
for possible antitrust violations.

The New York Times
says<http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/05/technology/companies/05apple.html?_r=3&partner=rss&emc=rss>the
“interlocking directorates” rule, which prohibits someone from serving
on rival company boards if it might reduce competition, applies when
directly competing products account for more than 2 percent of a company’s
sales. And the list of areas where Google and Apple compete just keeps
getting longer: Apple’s iPhone vs. Google’s Android, Apple’s Safari browser
vs. Google’s Chrome, Apple laptops vs. Android netbooks, and now, Apple’s
operating system vs. Chrome OS.
On the last front, Google makes it clear that it isn’t thinking small,
either. The initial market for Chrome OS is netbooks (devices that are
smaller and cheaper than laptops), but Google also
says<http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/07/introducing-google-chrome-os.html>it’s
“being designed to power computers ranging from small netbooks to
full-size desktop systems.” In other words, we can expect Google to go
head-to-head with Apple at some point in the future, in the same way Apple
and Microsoft are duking it now now. It seems likely that Schmidt (pictured
above with Apple chief executive Steve Jobs) will have to resign from
Apple’s board before then. If he doesn’t, things could get … awkward
really awkward I guess...
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