Archive for the 'News' Category
We’re always happy to hear that you’re enjoying Google Chrome’s speed, and we’ve often been asked what makes Google Chrome so fast — from its snappy start-up time, and fast page-loading, to the ability to run complex web applications quickly.
For those of you who’d like to dive into the full technical intricacies on what makes Google Chrome a fast and responsive browser, we’ve put together video interviews to walk through some of the engineering involved. In particular, we take a look at the inner workings of DNS pre-resolution, the V8 JavaScript engine, and DOM bindings. In a future post, we’ll also cover other important aspects of Google Chrome’s speed, such as WebKit and UI responsiveness.
You can watch these interviews on the Chromium blog, or through the Google Chrome YouTube channel.
Fresh from a Halloween weekend, we’re excited to introduce a brand new beta for Google Chrome, which includes a few new treats and cool tricks for our users.
For those of you who use several computers — for example, a laptop at work and a desktop at home — you’ve asked for a way to keep your Google Chrome bookmarks in sync across multiple computers. Today’s new beta release allows you to do just that! You can keep your Google Chrome bookmarks synchronized and up-to-date across the multiple computers you use, without needing to manually recreate your bookmarks every time you use a different computer.
For more on how to use bookmark sync, check out the video below from one of our team members, Anthony LaForge:
Once you’ve activated Google Chrome bookmark sync on each of your computers, any changes you make to your bookmarks will appear on all synced computers in just a few seconds. (For those of you who are curious, this bit of magic is made possible by the same XMPP-based servers that power Google Talk).
As with every release, this new beta comes with many speed improvements. In particular, as web applications we use every day become increasingly dynamic, browsers like Google Chrome need to be able to construct and change elements on web pages as fast as possible. We’ve improved performance scores on Google Chrome by 30% since our current stable release, as measured by Mozilla’s Dromeao DOM Core Tests, and by 400% since our first stable release.

The beta channel provides a sneak preview of things to come with occasional rough edges and before most users see them, but it’s a great way for us to quickly churn out new features and get your feedback. To try out bookmark sync and other beta features, download the beta version of Google Chrome.
Earlier this week, I read an interesting article in the New York Times about shokunin kishitsu, or the ‘craftsman’s spirit.’ The craftsman’s spirit in Japanese culture basically appeals to all of us, regardless of vocation, to aspire to beauty in everything we do and create.
As we collaborated with artists around the globe to create themes for Google Chrome, we hope that bringing art from different cultures into the modern browser expresses some of that spirit. We’ve enjoyed hearing your thoughts on these designs and how you’ve used them to personalize your browser. For a friend who emailed me recently, the Hedgehog in the Fog theme brought back fond memories of his Russian childhood and the intrepid Yozhik (as the hedgehog is affectionately known in Russia). This Google Chrome theme is based on the 1975 animated film, which incidentally won “No.1 Animated film of all time” at the 2003 Laputa Animation Festival.
Beauty can be based on a heart-warming 34-year-old animation that makes us nostalgic, or cultural references that makes us who we are today. Our friends working on Google Chrome in Tokyo pointed us to a few Google Chrome themes that resonate with our users in Japan. These themes are based on a modern-day, participatory culture of remixing ideas. Take for example, the Google Chrome theme from global virtual pop star Hatsune Miku. Hatsune Miku began as a character in a vocal synthesis software package from Sapporo-based Crypton Future Media. But as musicians and artists created a body of work, including songs, drawings and animation for Hatsune Miku, she became a best-selling recording artist in Japan!
If you’re curious for more, you can get a taste of Google Chrome themes from Japan, including TENORI-ON, Yamaha’s nifty 16×16 visual musical instrument; the classic game Super Monkey Ball from Sega, and tea-loving ninjas Nintea from designer Panson Works and anime company Toei Animation (of Dragon Ball and Sailor Moon fame)
For the craftsmen — the engineers — working on Google Chrome around the globe, shokunin kishitsu provides lots of food for thought, as we continue to build on a browser designed to be fast, simple, and beautiful for users.
In the spirit of what our Japanese colleagues call “速い + ART” (or, speed + art), we’d like to leave you with a new video (with a surprise ending). Check it out at youtube.com/googlechromethemes, or by clicking on the image below.

NVIDIA has been working hard on its Tegra-based “computers-on-a-chip” line, and now it has been announced that as well as the normal mobile platforms like Windows Mobile or Google Android, it has also been working on the up-and-coming Google Chrome OS. Helped by none other than Google itsself.
NVIDIA’s GM of Mobile Business Mike Rayfield made the announcement to JKOnTheRun’s Kevin Tofel: “Nvidia is “working closely with Google,” on the Chrome OS platform”.

Google CEO Schmidt announced that he expects an Apple announcement about a notebook running Chrome OS no later than this year.
It’s an interesting announcement, especially coming from Schmidt, the Google CEO who sat on the Apple board for a while, causing all kinds of rumors, and resigned, again amidst much speculation, earlier this summer. So why would Google be announcing an Apple notebook? Don’t they have their own people to do that?
No need to get too excited, as it’s only an announcement and we’ve seen announcements and retractions before now that times are hard in the economy. Schmidt has an optimistic view of the economy, he thinks the worst is over:“I think the new normal is now,” the Google CEO said at a briefing with reporters, at the Allen & Co media and technology conference in Sun Valley, Idaho.
So is this another attempt at the big Kill Microsoft Plan that many suspect makes Google and Apple such staunch allies? Schmidt didn’t want to get into that:
“I don’t want to talk about Microsoft,” he said, and went on to say that Google did not have any particular goals for Chrome to take market share in the PC business. “We actually don’t look at market share at all,” said Schmidt.
Sure you don’t, honey. That’s why you’re the CEO of one of the biggest companies on the planet.
Google just released an update to its cutting edge developer version of Google Chrome that adds a lot of polish to the way Chrome handles extensions. Interestingly, while the stable versions of Chrome are still stuck with the 2.x series, the versions in the developer channel are now already designated as 4.x versions. At this point, users of the developer channel version can already easily install extensions, change themes, sync bookmarks, and profit from a faster rendering engine, while users of the more conservative stable version don’t have access to any of these features yet.
Among other things, Google has now made extension management a lot easier and if you use the dev channel version, just type in “chrome://extensions/” and the new extension management interface will pop up.
You shouldn’t read too much into Google Chrome’s version numbers. Just because you can now install Google Chrome 3.0, it doesn’t mean that Google wants to appear more mature than it already is. For Chrome, version numbers are just a way to highlight major milestones.
Three months after the first developer preview, Google Chrome 3.0 is out of beta and ready to replace the current stable version. Since Google updates the browser automatically, you might not even notice that you use a version that brings new features.
Even if it’s one of the fastest browsers available today, Google Chrome continues to improve its performance. “We’ve improved by more than 150% in Javascript performance since our very first beta, and by more than 25% since the most recent stable release,” mentions Google.
The new release supports themes so you can customize the browser with one of the 28 new themes. Not all of them are good-looking, but they’re easy to install and you don’t have to restart your browser after changing the theme.

Google Chrome 3.0 has an updated new tab page that lets you customize the pages reordering them using drag and drop, by pinning the pages you use frequently and removing the pages you no longer visit. Google simplified the page by removing the list of search boxes and the recent bookmarks.
(Tip: you can still use the previous new tab page design, by appending this flag to a Chrome shortcut: –old-new-tab-page.)

A feature you won’t probably use too often, at least for now, is the support for the HTML5 video and audio tags. Like Firefox 3.5, Chrome includes video codecs that allow you to embed videos without using slow and unreliable plug-ins like Adobe Flash. You can test this feature in TinyVid.com, an experimental Ogg video uploading site, or in YouTube’s HTML5 demo page, which uses an H.264 video.
One year after the first release, the numbers are impressive: “51 developer, 21 beta and 15 stable updates and 3,505 bugfixes”. Google Chrome’s market share is 2.84%, according to Net Applications, but the browser’s impact was even more significant: Chrome set a high standard for browsers by focusing on speed, a simplified user interface and by handling web pages as if they were applications. Safari 4, as well as the the next versions of Firefox, are influenced by Google Chrome’s simplicity.
In other Chrome news, the documentation for creating extensions is now available and the support for extensions is enabled by default in the dev channel. If you use the stable version of Chrome, you need to wait a little bit.
Thanks to a full year of great feedback from our users, we’re kicking off our second year of Google Chrome with a brand new stable release. This stable release incorporates many of the improvements and features that we tested out in our most recent beta release, including a 150% increase in Javascript performance since our very first beta, a freshly redesigned New Tab page, an improved Omnibox, Themes capability, as well as HTML5 features. You can get the full, play-by-play details on the Official Google Blog.
If you haven’t tried Google Chrome recently, we invite you to give it a whirl. Many of the improvements in this release were inspired by the responses from users, so we’re all ears if you have any feedback. If you’re already using Google Chrome, you’ll be automatically updated to this new version soon, but if you’re itching to try this right away, download the latest version at google.com/chrome.
Google released the Chrome browser on September 2, 2008. Now that Chrome has been out for about a year and it’s been almost six months since I last looked at Chrome’s market share, let’s take another peek.
For the last 30 days, here are my Google Analytics stats for mattcutts.com:

For me, 8.97% of my readers run Chrome, up from 7.04% in March 2009.
Some different browser marketshare numbers:
- Net Applications says that Chrome went from 2.59% to 2.84% from July 2009 to August 2009.
- StatCounter gives daily stats. I’m seeing 3.31% on Saturday August 1st to 3.59% on Saturday August 29th.
- Clicky says that in the last 60 days, Chrome has gone from 3.376% to 4.004%
So after one year, three different sources report market share of 2.84%, 3.59%, and 4.004%. That’s pretty good for 12 months. More importantly, Chrome has pushed all browsers to be faster, more modern, and generally better.
I’m also looking forward to some of the fun things coming in Chrome. Features like bookmark syncing and themes in the latest developer or “dev” release of Chrome are quite nice. If you’re adventurous, you can also try dev versions of Chrome for the Mac and Linux too. And if extensions are your thing, those are coming along as well.
Good news for extension developers: as of today, extensions are turned on by default on Google Chrome’s dev channel.
Extensions are small pieces of software that developers can write to customize the way Google Chrome works. We’ve been working on enabling extensions for a while, but until now, they were hidden behind a developer flag. As of today, this is no longer true. If you’re on the dev channel, you can try installing some of our sample extensions.
Removing the flag is the first step in our launch process, and it means we’re ready for a few more people to start using extensions– the kind of adventurous people who populate the dev channel. For this release, we focused on getting most of the basic infrastructure and security pieces in place, in particular our new permission system. However, you should still be cautious and only install extensions from developers you trust.
Going forward, we are working hard towards a release on the Beta Channel. The UI is likely to change as we bring it up to Google Chrome’s high standard, and we’re still finishing up a few APIs. We’ve also enlisted some help to get extensions up to speed on Mac and Linux.
From the beginning, we’ve strived to make extensions super easy to develop. If you’d like to give it a try, you’ll find everything you need to get started in our brand new documentation. If you’ve already written an extension, make sure to read this post about some recent changes.






