September 23, 2009 say something

The circus continues: Google Chrome Frame for Internet Explorer

Google sfida Microsoft con Chrome by Federico Fieni

Google sfida Microsoft con Chrome by Federico Fieni

Guess whose turn it is to bring Internet Exploder into the 21st century. Google has been dipping its fingers and toes everywhere, including the browser market. But it wasn’t content with creating its own; it just had to meddle with everyone’s favorite browser, IE. And based on the name, Google Chrome Frame quite literally puts Google Chrome into Internet Explorer (versions 6, 7, 8). That is, Chrome’s support for HTML5 and its JavaScript engine.

For ordinary users, it means having to download a plugin for IE so it works just as well as any other modern, standards-compliant browser does. For developers, it means adding a meta tag so their websites actually work work better.

Mozilla has done something similar.

A few months back, Mozilla released a <canvas> element plugin. It’s really not a new concept; clearly folks at Mozilla and Google are taking drastic measures so they can slap sense into IE.

Isn’t this Microsoft’s job?

And look how well they’re doing with that.

Let’s turn the tables on this one: would Microsoft even think of creating extensions for competing browsers? Would we even find this acceptable? Of course things are different; Firefox and Chrome work worlds better than Internet Explorer ever has. You don’t see Kill Firefox or Kill Chrome campaigns, do you?

Internet Explorer Voodoo Doll

This is not a cure-all

If you don’t have enough privileges to install plugins on your workstation, the plugin and meta tag combo is useless. It doesn’t solve the biggest roadblock to dropping IE6. And if you can install programs on your computer, why not just get Chrome anyway?

Though it’s a valiant effort to bring the IE6 user stats down by a few notches, web designers and developers would still have to test for browsers without Chrome Frame.

Can you say passive-aggressive?

But is it really a charitable deal with a hint of “desperate times call for desperate measures”? If anything, this move by Google (and Mozilla) is an elegant finger to Microsoft.

Google could just sit on its pretty throne, throw more resources into advertising its own browser, and wait ’til it eventually dominates the market. Search, email, advertising, online office suite, VoIP, real-time protocol: everything it touches turns gold. History is on Chrome’s side.

But there’s more to Google Chrome Frame as it seems to scream: “when will you ever get your act together, Microsoft!”—masked by a 24-karat, “we’re here to make the Web a better place” grin.

February 13, 2008 one reply

The Must Haves for blogs to catch the stressed out reader

How you want to pimp your blog is up to you, but this week, being totally stressed out to get everything ready in time for me leaving for Japan on early Thursday morning, I realized that blogs without these three plugins (or similar functionality) and features just will have to go!

  • Subscribe to comments plugin. Seriously, it should be a default functionality, and yes, I realize that it’s not here on Wisdump. One of the things I’ll fix when we upgrade to the new design.
  • Valid RSS feed that’s easy to find. Why do you hide it in the footer already? If I like what I see but am stressed for time, I want to add it to my reader and be on my way.
  • SuperMegaDuperSpamKiller(TM). No, that one doesn’t exist (?), but the result does. If your comments are full of spam, then I don’t want to participate in the conversation, and that’s both you and me missing out, mate.

Are there any features or plugins you feel have to be there for a blog to be usable at all, particularly when you’re in a rush?

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