tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2802075472139289461.post3112464778007160313..comments2023-01-15T16:06:38.677-08:00Comments on Lazy Hacker Babble: The value of Google ChromeLazyHackerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03264441996728050942noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2802075472139289461.post-82061889096661965222009-03-09T09:02:34.000-07:002009-03-09T09:02:34.000-07:00My question here is what is it about Chrome that o...My question here is what is it about Chrome that opens up developer minds to new possibilities? To my mind, it honestly seems no more innovative than the rest of the next gen browsers (less so than FF since it doesn't yet have an API, though it's forthcoming if not already forthcame :). I don't believe it has spurred competition any more than was already in place - if anything Safari's entrance as a real player with the launch of the mobile Safari seemed like much more a kick in FF's pants than Chrome was to any of the players. Gears is already out for other browsers, so the ability to have developers start blurring the line between web and desktop pre-existed.felixhttp://comments.deasil.com/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2802075472139289461.post-88784329621554584752009-03-09T16:36:05.000-07:002009-03-09T16:36:05.000-07:00It felt to me that Chrome was built with the devel...It felt to me that Chrome was built with the developer in mind rather then Joe Consumer. It came with functionality built-in for better debugging and they focused more on things like stability with interactions (writing email, editing documents, security) then browsing content sites. It's a browser that was designed to run apps and not just to render content.<br><br>Did they go far enough? Maybe not, but I think they didn't just try to build another web browser.hsinhttp://www.lazyhacker.comnoreply@blogger.com