Tuesday, December 1, 2009
Google Chrome OS still awaited
It's not every brand new operating system that gets open sourced a year before it hits the retail shelves. Then again, Chrome OS isn't just any OS, and Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) isn't just any company.
Indeed, that's just what Google did last week, making its brand new Chrome OS freely available for download by developers far and wide. Devices running the new operating system, on the other hand, are not expected until the fourth quarter of next year.
"We are doing this early, a year before Google Chrome OS will be ready for users, because we are eager to engage with partners, the open source community and developers," wrote Caesar Sengupta, Google's group product manager, and Matt Papakipos, engineering director, on the Official Google Blog.
"As with the Google Chrome browser, development will be done in the open from this point on," they explained. "This means the code is free, accessible to anyone and open for contributions."
Optimized Hardware
It may seem counterintuitive to release the free code first and then expect to sell it running on actual devices a year later, when -- theoretically, at least -- it could have been run on existing hardware in the meantime.
Yet the hardware that's developed between now and then will make all the difference, Eitan Bencuya, a Google spokesperson, told LinuxInsider.
"The usage case where Chrome OS really shines is when it's combined with hardware that takes advantage of it," Bencuya explained.
Fast Hardware
Speed, for example, is one of the operating system's defining characteristics, he pointed out.
Accordingly, unnecessary processes are being removed, operations are being optimized, and as many things will run in parallel as possible in the new operating system.
Those changes will also dig down into the hardware level.
"Our obsession with speed goes all the way down to the metal," Sengupta and Papakipos explained. "We are specifying reference hardware components to create the fastest experience for Google Chrome OS."
A Security Sandbox
Similarly, many of the operating system's enhanced security features will rest on optimized hardware as well, Bencuya added.
Using Chrome OS, each application is contained within a security sandbox, making it harder for malware and viruses to infect a computer.
In addition, if a computer does get compromised, it is designed to fix itself with a reboot. Users' files are kept on a separate partition of the hard drive, meaning that they won't get lost in such a case, Bencuya explained.
Waiting for ARM
Most likely, the operating system is waiting for ARM-based hardware to come out, Jim McGregor, chief technology strategist with In-Stat, told LinuxInsider.
Currently, "all the solutions are x86-based, for the most part," McGregor explained. "There are OEMs that have announced netbooks with ARM (Nasdaq: ARMHY) processors, but there are no products yet."
As a result, "we're kind of at this void in the market now where we're waiting for everything to go towards the Internet," but the pieces aren't all in place yet, he noted. "We're kind of playing catch-up and waiting for this ubiquitous environment to take hold."
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comments:
AV,無碼,a片免費看,自拍貼圖,伊莉,微風論壇,成人聊天室,成人電影,成人文學,成人貼圖區,成人網站,一葉情貼圖片區,色情漫畫,言情小說,情色論壇,臺灣情色網,色情影片,色情,成人影城,080視訊聊天室,a片,A漫,h漫,麗的色遊戲,同志色教館,AV女優,SEX,咆哮小老鼠,85cc免費影片,正妹牆,ut聊天室,豆豆聊天室,聊天室,情色小說,aio,成人,微風成人,做愛,成人貼圖,18成人,嘟嘟成人網,aio交友愛情館,情色文學,色情小說,色情網站,情色,A片下載,嘟嘟情人色網,成人影片,成人圖片,成人文章,成人小說,成人漫畫,視訊聊天室,性愛,聊天室,情色,a片,AV女優
Post a Comment