The browser war is back on. This time It is not between
Firefox,
Internet explore and
safari. The big boss of internet world also joined this war. Ya, you got it, I am talking about
Google. On Tuesday(today) in 100 countries, Google will release a free Web browser called
Chrome that the company said would challenge Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, as well as the Firefox browser. But the question that I have in my mind is
"Are Internet Explorer and Firefox ready to do battle with Chrome?"Current scenario of browser market is like this:
Microsoft still holds
73 percent of the browser market. The market share for
Firefox has climbed to
19 percent, while
Apple’s Safari has 6 percent. Last week, Microsoft released Internet Explorer 8 beta 2, which includes improved security and new browsing aids. Earlier this summer, Mozilla released Firefox 3, which garnered
8 million downloads in
24 hours.So
Why google is launching new browser??According to
google official blog "Because we believe we can add value for users and, at the same time, help drive innovation on the web." (Directly from
google official blog).
What's new?Google Chrome is an open sourced browser based on the
Webkit HTML engine, but adds a new Javascript engine, and some UI changes. To advertise it, they've made a
comic, showing the browser's features. Isn't It stupid but brilliant idea, Google is launching its product with a
comic. This comic is also available on
Google Books There's all sorts of other promises - stability, speed - and Google does have lots of stored sites to test it on.
Interesting: Chrome also puts Google in competition with a friend, the
Mozilla Corporation, which manages the Firefox project. Just last week, Google renewed its deal with Mozilla. Under the arrangement, Google Search is the home page for Firefox and Google is its default search bar, and Google makes substantial payments to Mozilla. The agreement runs through November 2011, and will continue.
Its not surprising, after all Google is 100 percent on the web. It would be more surprising if Google didn't do something in the browser space.
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