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Linux and Open Source

Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols & Paula Rooney

Google's Android+Chrome likely a winning combo

By | February 7, 2012, 10:56pm PST

Summary: The marriage of Android and Chrome — just as the union of Android code for smartphones and Android code for tablets were merged — will give Google stronger ammunition as it battles Apple’s iPhone and iPad in the market, but time is of the essence. It is not clear when the Chrome for Android will be ready to ship and only a handful of Android 4.0 smartphones have shipped to date.

The forthcoming Chrome browser for Android is a good move for Google as it attempts to shakes off extreme competition from Apple’s iPhone/iPad, disappointing sales of Android tablets and worries about fragmentation of its two most popular open source projects.

On Tuesday, Google showed off a preview of the new Chrome browser for its latest mobile phone operating system, Android 4.0, which debuted last quarter. Google will not say when the browser update for Android 4.0 will appear.

Android+

Android+Chrome

What does it have? Much of what the desktop version has, notably an Omnibox for searching, seamless sign-in and sync of bookmarks and data, a toolbar with direct access to search, navigation and tabs, unimited tabs, support for many HTML5 features for enhanced web experience and remote debugging of web sites.

The developer opined in an online company video, the enhanced Chrome browser for Android on smartphones and tablets is designed from the ground up as a multiprocessor browser and is no “Chrome Lite.

The multiprocessor architecture of the browser allows for significant performance, navigation and simplicity of web computing. It has, for example, support for unlimited tabs and a web pages stack for organization on a small screen.It also has excellent syncing capabilities with the desktop edition.

“You can flip or swipe between an unlimited number of tabs using intuitive gestures, as if you’re holding a deck of cards in the palm of your hands, each one a new window to the web,” said one Google blog about the preview Chrome browser for Android on Feb 7. “Seamless sign-in and sync so you can take your personalized web browsing experience with you wherever you go, across devices.”

Key new mobile oriented features include font boosting for better viewing of text on small devices and Link Preview, which zooms in on keyword links, especially if they are tightly snug on a page, and displays them in a translucent sidebar.

The Chrome browser also offers “incognito mode for private browsing and fine-grained privacy options (tap menu icon, ‘Settings,’ and then ‘Privacy’) and:

View open tabs: Access the tabs you left open on your computer (also signed into Chrome)—picking up exactly where you left off.

Get smarter suggestions: If you visit a site often on your computer, you’ll also get an autocomplete suggestion for it on your mobile device, so you can spend less time typing.

Marrying the two projects is a no-brainer from a marketing point of view. Chrome is among the top web browsers and Google’s other top open source project — Android — has been a big hit on the smartphone.

The move unifies the code base and rationalizes two of the company’s open source projects that competed directly in some instances. ChromeOS (with Chrome browser) and Android with its own nondescript web browser were both designed for tablets.

Has this hurt Google’s tablet aspirations? I don’t know, but I’d much rather have one horse to bet on to compete against Apple’s astronomically successful iPad.

Product consolidation is good for Google. The debut of Android 4.0, Ice Cream Sandwich, for both the tablet and smartphone last quarter, was another good move to stop fears about fragmentation. Previously, Google had two different Android code bases for its smartphone and laptop.The emergence of a clear winner will send a strong signal to OEMs which Google tablet OS to back and to consumers which tablets to buy.

The only big problem is product delivery, it seems. To date, one a handful of OEMs have delivered Android 4.0 smartphones — including the Nexus Galaxy — and Motorola’s next-generation of ICS-based Droids is only promised for sometime in the first half of 2012.

Are Google and Motorola awaiting word from the government on their proposed merger before launching ICS devices?

“Ice Cream Sandwich brings an entirely new look and feel to Android. It has a redesigned user interface with improved multi-tasking, notifications, Wi-Fi hotspot, NFC support and a full web browsing experience. With Ice Cream Sandwich, Android has been rethought and redesigned to be simple, beautiful and useful,” one Motorola exec said in a blog. “Ice Cream Sandwich introduces innovations such as Face Unlock to unlock your phone, a Data Manager to control your network data usage, and advanced multimedia and imaging features. Ice Cream Sandwich also provides developers with new APIs, unified U.I for phones and Tablets, and improved performance by enabling developers to leverage hardware graphic acceleration.”

One Verizon spokesman could not say when the update will be available for a handful of existing smartphones.

“We don’t have an timeframe at this moment for Ice Cream Sandwich but so far to my knowledge the following devices will get the Ice Cream Sandwich update: Droid Bionic, Droid Razr, HTC Rezound, Spectrum by LG, Droid Xyboard, Motorola Xoom and Droid 4,” said Motorola Mobility spokesman Albert Aydin.

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Topics

Paula Rooney is a Boston-based writer who has followed the tech industry for almost two decades.

Disclosure

Paula Rooney

Paula Rooney owns no stock in the companies that she covers. She holds a 401K that is managed by Morgan Stanley.

Biography

Paula Rooney

Paula Rooney has covered the software and technology industry for more than 20 years, starting with semiconductor design and mini-computer systems at EDN News and later focused on PC software companies including Microsoft, Lotus, Oracle, Red Hat, Novell and other open source and commercial software companies for CRN and PCWeek. She received a silver award from the American Society of Business Publication Editors in 2005 for her profile on Linus Torvalds and edited and co-authored "Partnering With Microsoft," a book about Microsoft's channel published by CMP Publishing in 2004. Rooney graduated from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in 1997. In her off time, she enjoys scuba diving, sailing, sun worshipping, running, reading, surfing (the net) and hanging out with her family. She resides on the shores of Scituate, Massachusetts.

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mynet
eskimynet Updated - 17th Feb
mynet
0 Votes
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I have two Android devices, a Samsung Galaxy SII and a Lenovo tablet, neither is running ICS. This announcement may be exciting for some, but it may make more of us wishful that we had delayed our purchases.

I agree about the delivery problem. OEMS and ISPS need to do something to fix the problem or it will drive people the other way. You cannot keep on churning out an excellent product and withhold upgrades without consequences. People start to question their decisions while ISPs consider trying to milk more from the customer and those looking on from the sidelines decide not to play that game.

I should get an upgrade to ICS, but when is anybody's guess. If not, then I will root my phone and tablet and do it myself. It should not have to be that way, but users may have to do that en masse to get any attention to the problem.
@linuxcanuck@... By June, it is likely you will not be complaining. This is the nature of devices that are not Google Experience Devices.
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@linuxcanuck@...
As the lady said "it's only for a handful of android phones".

With ICS at 1%, make that a thimble-full.

You gotta love fragmentation.
@Englishmole You do? I own a few Android devices, and I'm getting sick of it... But then again, what's the alternative?
@Englishmole
remember that a first gen ipod touch, iphone 2g can't even get ios 4 let alone ios 5. the iphone 3g and maybe the 3gs are stuck on ios 4. so whats different with the idevices?
all of these devices have an insidious feature built in called planned obsolescence. don't only finger the droid devices.
@Englishmole Mikep123 is correct and let's not forget that SiRI isn't backward compatible either. Considering that was the 4S' main selling point, iOS has "fragmentation" as well.
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Microsoft calls this 'upgrade rights'
Rabid Howler Monkey 8th Feb
@linuxcanuck@... And, later this year, we will likely see Windows 8 upgrade rights offered to those purchasing a PC with Windows 7 (in this case, it doesn't mean that many will choose to upgrade).

Did either Samsung or Lenovo provide you with upgrade rights when you purchased your Android-based devices? If not, then they are not obligated to offer you an upgrade to ICS. However, they *are* obligated to provide you with both bug fixes and security patches for whatever version of Android your devices shipped with. In addition, app developers are obligated to do the same with their apps running on whatever Android versions you are using.

With Android, at least there are after-market options like CyanogenMod for those wanting and/or needing the latest and greatest features.

P.S. In the meantime, give Opera a spin on your Android-based devices. It's also a good web browser.
@Rabid Howler Monkey I'll tell you what cheeses me off: The least they could do is produce an upgrade path. Regardless of whether MS gives you a free upgrade or not, the option is always there (albeit, for a cost). With Android, you're just stuck with what you got for life, unless the community can manage to hack one together.

I'm waiting to see what happens in the Win 8 tablet world before paying for any more Android products. I grow tired of the game.
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Thanks - I did
rhonin 8th Feb
@Rabid Howler Monkey
Doesn't offer much that the built in browser does not provide.

Wile I'd like to have ICS, it isnt a must have for me.
When it comes Ill take it. Till then, my phone works great as is.
SGS2 Skyrocket.
why is this even a top story.... there are many browsers for the android and that is a good thing as each offers something different..... the only key feature is being able to MASK the browser as coming from a desktop not a tablet/phone so u dont have to deal with the site being limited
@bspurloc Well, it could be a top story to those 3 people that actually own a device that this would apply to?
  • Flagged
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fullsites on Webkit
warboat 8th Feb
@bspurloc
you can already do this on the standard Android Webkit browser.
type about:debug in the URL box
then menu key--->more--->settings--->UAstring
and set it to desktop
you will now get full desktop sites and not get redirected to mobile/wap sites.
@linuxcanuck@...
I just purchased Asus Eee Pad Transformer Prime running ICS and it's great! I would match it against a current IPad anyday. IMHO, the Transformer Primer is a better Pad than the current IPad. Hopefully Paula will do a review of it someday soon.
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@linuxcanuck@... Uncanny, as I also have two Android devices: a Samsung Galaxy S II and a Lenovo ThinkPad Tablet. Both have been confirmed by Samsung and Google, respectively, as going to be upgraded to Ice Cream Sandwich. But in the case of my Galaxy S II, that update (originally released by Google some months ago) will have to be approved and modified by Samsung (which is happening embarrassingly slowly) and finally approved and modified by my local Alaskan cell provider (which is sadly unlikely to ever happen). Google needs to find out how to get updates to phones supposedly running "their" operating system. With so much control in the hands of ISPs and OEMs, there's no incentive to allow users to update "old" hardware.

Making Google Chrome available only to the latest version of Android may be a ploy by Google to try to encourage ISPs/OEMs to offer updates; unfortunately, ISPs/OEMs are going to instead use it as leverage to encourage users to go out and buy the latest phones.
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@linuxcanuck@...
It's frustrating to me: The least they could do is produce an upgrade path. With Android, you're just stuck with what you got for life, unless the community can manage to hack one together.

I'm waiting to see if they come up with an upgrade for "Motorola's star the Atrix," what happens in the Win 8 tablet world before paying for any more Android products. I grow tired of getting stuck with expensive devises that are not up-gradable...
Saw the headline and new it had to be Stevie Boy. Yep it's the year of linux again and betamax is going to make a comeback.
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@Blogsworth
Stevie Boy didn't write this, Paula Rooney did.
@Blogsworth
This article was written by Paula Rooney. If you're going to shoot the messenger, you should at least aim at the correct messenger.
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@Zogg Yes well written and not the normal SJVN BS garnered to get hits...
@Zogg People like Blogsworth don't need facts.
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@Blogsworth

Thats why you should read the article before commenting, the greater quality of the article immediately meant that it couldn't be SJVN
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@the.nameless.drifter BINGO! As I was reading it was thinking this can't be SJVN ... LOL and it wasn't - too funny.
@Blogsworth

Last I heard betamax was still the best for tape storage for computers although I don't know if its still used to be honest.
Wasn't there just a report just published saying that IE9 was the best at catching malware and chrome, safari and firefox were way back.
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Winning a combo for Google and only Google as they will now have every single bit of your info, steal it, claim it as theirs, then sell it back to you. The consumers lose on this deal.
@Loverock Davidson- Exactly why I've deleted everything 'Google'. It's taken a couple months to get all my accounts switched to a new address and such, but I am one who is now 'Google Free'.
@techygeek82 Back to the cave ... or right back up a tree? happy
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@techygeek82

just like the Flintstones....When they tire of doing things the hard way, they'll be back.
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@Loverock Davidson-
Your right, Android and Chrome is a winning combo.
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@Loverock Davidson-
I only use their search engine. I do not have any @gmail accounts as I respect my privacy.
Yep lets make sure Google knows absolutely everything about you. No way will I be using Chrome, and I avoid Google as much as possible. I only use it as a search tool of last resort.
@hayneiii@... like when you really need quality. happy
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@Heenan73
I don't think there is a person on the planet that can argue that Google doesn't produce the best search results. It's just a smarter decision to avoid everything else they touch.
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Kris, I would argue that Google is not even a decent choice for searching. I have tried the same search in Google compared to other search engines, and invariably get better results from the others. I now use Bing full time and wouldn't go back to Google if you paid me to. The same is true for their other services: There are better choices out there.
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Google paranoia
warboat 8th Feb
@hayneiii@...
yeh you probably use facebook and have no problem trusting them with your personal data. Yet you have a huge problem with Google who doesn't have your personal data and their main objective is to present you profiled ads so they can make money.
Brainless anti-Google paranoia.
Oh yeah, that's what I want - a "winning combo". Can I get that with Fries and an Apple Pie? Oh, sorry. This isn't the fast-food industry, is it? "Winning Combos" aren't how successful products are defined. Great utility and user-experience are what sets products apart and creates demand. Apple has that. Google + Android doesn't.
@MeerkatMac
Exactly.
When you have an elegant combination of hardware, software, battery life, OS, size, weight, quality, price, availability and customer service--that's when you will have a "winning combo."
Android + Chrome barely addresses two of those 10 factors which is why Apple is sucking 75% profit out of the mobile space.
@MeerkatMac
Exactly.
When you have an elegant combination of hardware, software, battery life, OS, size, weight, quality, price, availability and customer service--that's when you will have a "winning combo."
Android + Chrome barely addresses two of those 10 factors which is why Apple is sucking 75% profit out of the mobile space.
@MeerkatMac
Exactly.
When you have an elegant combination of hardware, software, battery life, OS, size, weight, quality, price, availability and customer service--that's when you will have a "winning combo."
Android + Chrome barely addresses two of those 10 factors which is why Apple is sucking 75% profit out of the mobile space.
@MeerkatMac
Exactly.
When you have an elegant combination of hardware, software, battery life, OS, size, weight, quality, price, availability and customer service--that's when you will have a "winning combo."
Android + Chrome barely addresses two of those 10 factors which is why Apple is sucking 75% profit out of the mobile space.
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RE: Google's Android+Chrome likely a winning combo
anothercanuck Updated - 8th Feb
@MeerkatMac Another thing Apple has, and Microsoft for that matter, is complete admin+ access to your entire computer each and every time you do an update. Those 2 companies make Google look like an amateur when it comes to gathering info about you. The don't stop at web habits, they go through all your files, local email, programs and anything else on your computer.

And if you think they don't use/sell that info, you may want re-read your EULAs.
Apple and MS execs must find this whole "Google has my web info" panic so funny, because Apple/MS has all that plus every password you have ever used.
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All these people complain about Google. Facebook's the one I loathe. Google collects information from you and uses it to provide you ads. In other words, they share your information with you for your benefit. They don't share it outside the Googlesphere.

If you're not careful, Facebook will update your status with the most mundane things you do unknowingly. And for those things where you don't authorize a Facebook post, it probably still collects info on what you're doing, because those facebook controls have you logged in. It's integrated into so many places too. Why the eff, would I want to post what I just bought on Amazon? And if I did, I could just go to FB and post it.
@gwartnet Exactly right; Google use aggregated data, FB uses personal data. Some folk haven't quite grasped that yet.
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its just a browser lol
SonicLogic 8th Feb
im happy using opera on my android phone works smooth and has many of the features mentioned here. I dont see this as much of a turning point in the way phones are sold or how the market share is going to turn. It might be a good stock app but its nothing really that new
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No Flash
JScottA44 8th Feb
Do I understand correctly that there is no Flash support?! If true....YAY!!! But what are all the Android fans going to say about that?
@JScottA44 Since Chrome on the PC supports Flash and Android supports Flash, why do you think Chrome on an Android device won't support Flash?
I have heard no mention of Adobe Flash support in this. HTM5 is not nearly ubiquitous enough on the internet yet (and I can't see how it will be for the next 12 months) to allow Chrome on Android 4.0 not to support it. If they can get that working and keep in working for the next 12 months or so, then they can hopefully let Flash support die. If they let it die before then, I can only say I may root my device get it working with whatever supports Flash and let the device stagnate. Once again, the community of Flash users and tablet vendor is probably going to have let Google know of the need and make sure it gets the attention it needs. Hopefully Google is also working with web developers, Adobe, etc... to transition away from Flash if they truely want to let it die, but doing so now, before the industry is ready would be a big mistake for Android (especially since it is NOT going away any time soon on PC platform).
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@jkohut
Flash is already supported on Android as a browser plug in (though I think you have to download it separately in the app store). I imagine this will plug right in to Chrome as well if it's installed on your device.

But in the future, Flash's days are numbered. Adobe is re-organizing their efforts around development tooling for HTML5. I predict if Flash exists in the future, it will not be a browser plugin, but it will be implemented as some sort of compiler that translates ActionScript to HTML5 + Javascript. Google has already been messing around with this notion with Swiffy. If Adobe works on a similar, official product (as I suspect they are), it won't take long for HMTL5 to replace Flash in a much more aggressive way.
The only way to create a reliable product is to own the product entirely. Just waiting for them to finish building that 'wall' around their 'garden.'
i think they will release chrome for ios and windows phone as well.
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mynet
eskimynet Updated - 17th Feb
mynet

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