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I had at 1 point felt that performance on critical line of business apps would always require that one-on-one feel you get by using an actual desktop/laptop OS... and predominantly, Windows ruled the roost in enterprise-land.
However, this is quickly become a thing of the past for many reasons: Hardware getting better, programmers writing cleaner code that works better together (I think), virtualization, stronger SaaS offerings, and more availability of high-speed data access might be just a few I would mention.
Do you feel like this browser is out to steal more market from IE alone - or do you think FF will end up being a casualty on this as well? What's your take on some of the legal verbiage Google is so fond of slipping in (e.g. you give us rights to your work)?
On a side note, have you used / played with Zimbra? I'm trying to find a good mail client aside from Mac's own.
David
The only real think I care about when it comes to my browser is the look of the icon and its stability. The Chrome icon is a little ugly and since its a beta I don't even want to go near it. I use Firefox exclusively and I haven't had a single crash in months. The icon is pretty and that's all I need.
The reason I don't use Safari is just because I don't like the fact that when I hit Command+a number it takes me to a bookmark in my bookmark bar rather than the specified tab.
Google Chrome is an interesting idea but until it proves to me that it is going to stay out of my way and just let me browse I'd rather just stick with Firefox
could be the gateway to the Web, where we spend a great deal of our
time every day, and it's one backed by one of the largest, most
successful Web companies in history - one known for superior
engineering and innovation. Having read the descriptions of Chrome
prior to trying it, I knew it wasn't going to be revolutionary, when
compared to Safari and Firefox, but it was something I wanted to say I
knew well, and it was worth booting up Windows and spending some time
there to check it out.