[backstage] Google Chrome OS

2009-07-08 Thread Ian Forrester
http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/07/introducing-google-chrome-os.html

Ok so what do people think?

For me Google is certainly on a home run at the moment, Wave anyone?
>From reading the link above, it seems like it will be something like I saw at 
>Minibar a while back but can't find now. So a boot straight into a browser 
>using a small Linux kernel. I was hoping it would be a X11 environment to 
>compete with Gnome, KDE, Fluxbox, etc.

But I do think Google's right. The web is the platform, just like how Palm 
created WebOS. HTML5 is going a large part of the change.

Cheers,

Ian Forrester

This e-mail is: []secret; []private; [x]public

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Room 1044, BBC Manchester BH, Oxford Road, M60 1SJ
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Re: [backstage] Google Chrome OS

2009-07-08 Thread Dave Crossland
2009/7/8 Ian Forrester :
>
> http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/07/introducing-google-chrome-os.html
> From reading the link above, it seems like it will be something like I
> saw at Minibar a while back but can't find now ...
> I was hoping it would be a X11 environment to compete with Gnome,
> KDE, Fluxbox, etc.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyro_Desktop shows that you can make a
desktop using the web canvas as the compositing engine; perhaps it
will go that way.
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Re: [backstage] Google Chrome OS

2009-07-08 Thread David Greaves
Ian Forrester wrote:
> http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/07/introducing-google-chrome-os.html
> 
> Ok so what do people think?
> 
> For me Google is certainly on a home run at the moment, Wave anyone?
> From reading the link above, it seems like it will be something like I saw at 
> Minibar a while back but can't find now. So a boot straight into a browser 
> using a small Linux kernel. I was hoping it would be a X11 environment to 
> compete with Gnome, KDE, Fluxbox, etc.

If you want an X11/Linux environment for small form-factor mobile devices with a
focus on touch-ability then have a look at Mer.

http://wiki.maemo.org/Mer

FWIW I'll be talking about it at the UKUUG : http://summer2009.ukuug.org/Talks

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Re: [backstage] Google Chrome OS

2009-07-10 Thread Brian Butterworth
Ian,
I have been expecting something like this for a while, but I actually
expected it out of China or India, to be honest.

Windows 7 is bloody fantastic, IMHO, but the "legacy" issue is something
that is a great boon to corporate customers who have stuck with Microsoft
over the decades.  If you have something obsucre, but vital, written for DOS
or any version of Windows, it will probably still work, after a fashion.

And this is true for hardware.  If your video is VGA, AGP, PCI, PCI/e, it
will work with Windows.  Any architecture, and system, Windows will still
work.

A "new OS" doesn't have to do that.  If you target the Netbook market, you
need a USB driver and lots of generic USB device drivers, and that it.   No
serial ports, no parallel ports, legacy MIDI systems etc etc

With just a single video driver, a unified sound system, USB networking
drivers (Ethernet and wifi) you can support a whole class of machines.

Then, just fire up the browser.If you need a "file manager", do it in
the browser.

And finally, Gears deals with your offline needs.

Give a member of the public a machine that you press the on button and then
wait one, two seconds and you are online.  I can see the advantage of that.


Even Windows 7 will be just starting it's animation, and Chome OS will be on
your homepage.

Such machines would be great for corporations too - a proper thin client.

2009/7/8 Ian Forrester 

> http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/07/introducing-google-chrome-os.html
>
> Ok so what do people think?
>
> For me Google is certainly on a home run at the moment, Wave anyone?
> From reading the link above, it seems like it will be something like I saw
> at Minibar a while back but can't find now. So a boot straight into a
> browser using a small Linux kernel. I was hoping it would be a X11
> environment to compete with Gnome, KDE, Fluxbox, etc.
>
> But I do think Google's right. The web is the platform, just like how Palm
> created WebOS. HTML5 is going a large part of the change.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Ian Forrester
>
> This e-mail is: []secret; []private; [x]public
>
> Senior Producer, BBC Backstage, BBC R&D
> Room 1044, BBC Manchester BH, Oxford Road, M60 1SJ
> email: ian.forres...@bbc.co.uk
> work: +44 (0)1612444063 | mob: +44 (0)7711913293
>
> -
> Sent via the backstage.bbc.co.uk discussion group.  To unsubscribe, please
> visit http://backstage.bbc.co.uk/archives/2005/01/mailing_list.html.
>  Unofficial list archive:
> http://www.mail-archive.com/backstage@lists.bbc.co.uk/
>



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