Chrome OS must be a dream come true for Google-versus-Microsoft fanboys. Rumors that Google would ship a desktop OS first flew back in 2006, but the project in question turned out to be for internal use only. Then came Android, and reports that Google's smartphone OS would soon make the leap to more traditional PCs set the market abuzz again -- although many remained skeptical. Now the announcement of Chrome OS should brush any lingering doubts aside.
Not everyone is impressed with the search giant's latest move, however. My colleague Randall Kennedy says Chrome OS has "an ice cube's chance in Hell" of competing successfully with Windows or Mac OS X, citing the overwhelming effort needed to duplicate the full range of device drivers and applications available on those platforms today. Randall just doesn't see that happening, and for that matter neither do I.
[ Find out what InfoWorld contributors Randall Kennedy and Savio Rodrigues think of Google's newly announced OS ]
But Chrome OS isn't meant to be a pound-for-pound competitor to Windows. Though it's built on the Linux kernel, it's really something brand new. In fact, when we look back 10 years from now, the debut of Google's Chrome OS may well mark the moment when cloud computing finally became real.
Chrome OS: Custom-built for the cloud
It's particularly telling that Chrome OS will ship with support for both Intel and ARM processors. Google reps say the OS will initially target netbooks, and low-powered ARM chips are expected to play an increasing role in that market.
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Download now »Randall Kennedy's recent blog has presented a very different assessment of Chrome OS's potential vs. Windows. I have commented there and under Robert X. Cringeley's recent blog about "Do we really need another OS?".
What it comes down to is, do we really want to trust our data and critical files to an OS which cannot access and process these files on the local computer? For most of the world, the answer is a resounding NO. A complete local OS will still be needed by any serious business or consumer computer user. Hard Drives are not going anywhere anytime soon.
But this is not how Chrome OS is being hyped by its current fans. It is being presented as a Windows alternative, not a niche OS. And this is where the criticisms of Randall Kennedy, Robert Cringely, and myself, among many others, are coming from.
If Chrome OS were being marketed as a Mobile OS, I think it would be less likely to be compared with full-fledged OSes, and the discussion could focus on what Chrome OS really brings to the table which Windows and Linux do not. Which is hard to say while Chrome OS is still vaporware.
I ride my bicycle all around town, so the bike vs. car analogy is not lost on me. But when I really have to get somewhere, or my elderly Dad wants to go along, a bicycle is not practical. It is niche transportation for me, not my family workhorse. And when I want to go on line, I usually find I need to compose a document, or edit an image for upload to my blog, or something else for which I like to retain a local copy. Even e-mail should be stored locally to comply with business regulations. None of which is good news for the OS in the Clouds.

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