September 4, 2008 8:39 PM PDT

How will Google Chrome change the user experience on the Web?

Posted by Tim Leberecht
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By Gianluca Brugnoli, Principal Design Analyst in frog design 's Milan studio

Google Chrome was born explicitly as a platform for Web applications. From the first bits I saw I can say that Google's new creation delivers most of the promises and brings new interesting innovations in the user experience realm. Competitors will find them hard to ignore, especially when you look at the tab concept improvements. For a good review of these points, you can refer to this post on Ars Technica.

Many hailed Google's move as a revolutionary step. And indeed, with Google Chrome, the Web application era is getting real. Let's look beyond the technology and outline some possible models and consequences Chrome might have for the field of user experience:

Firefox's concept, where the Web browser remains the key tool and the main interface for using a Web application, is a service that is completely online. In this case, the user experience is chiefly based on typical Web technologies, that is, the magic triad XHTML, CSS, and Javascript. Standard Web browsing is blended in with Web application interaction. The user jumps between tabs within the same context and tool.

An alternative model seeks to overcome the Web browser, hiding it for the user, like Mozilla Prism, or at least trying to replace it with a different client and dedicated interfaces. This is the model you can see in action with Adobe Air or Microsoft WPF, and also with Apple's iTunes. In this case, the user experience is based on a mix of locally installed software components and user interfaces, online contents and services. With this model you get the best performances and a more consistent user experience while the Web remains in the background as a distribution channel for data exchange. Any device and system has its own client, designed and created ad hoc. Nevertheless, as you can see with iTunes, the user sometimes is locked into a "walled garden."

The pure online Web application model based on Chrome, with few local components installed on your hardware, is certainly the most promising one: truly open, flexible, and easy to upgrade. But for now, Chrome is still a Web browser, and its dependency from the Web browser's user experience could be a soft spot, or at least a strong constraint for the Web application's evolution.

Talking about the Chrome "revolution," many commentators are using the metaphor of the operating system. The browser plays the part of the platform, and the Web application is the software. But a real operating system is not only a software platform; it also provides a framework for user interaction, a consistent UI layer, as well as components that the software designer and developers usually have to follow. It puts together many small tools and modules, unifies the user experience, and brings into play every software application built on it.

I think that this is the next big challenge. Will Google be able to change the rules of the Web user experience? With Chrome and Android, Google is getting into the big game: building a consistent and unique experience for end users as well as application designers and developers. Google is an acclaimed leader in Web technologies innovation, but from the end user point of view many Web applications are still nothing more than a toy for geeks. Now they have the opportunity to get their beautiful tech jewels out of the eternal beta phase, into true commercial products focused on the end user.

Tim Leberecht is frog design's vice president of marketing and communications and has worked in the media, entertainment, and high-tech industries. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and is not an employee of CNET.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 9 comments
by MurphyW September 4, 2008 10:01 PM PDT
I just found that I could't log into my hotmail account. Is this a Chrome BUG?
Reply to this comment
by stalepie2 September 5, 2008 3:46 AM PDT
No, Hotmail has not yet been updated to support some of the newer browers, including recent versions of Opera. However there should be a link, as there is for me, that says "continue anyway to use Hotmail" which you can click.
by stalepie2 September 5, 2008 3:47 AM PDT
No, you should be able to click "Continue anyway to use Hotmail" when you get that message. It's because Hotmail has not yet been updated for some browsers. Recent versions of Opera display the same message, I've heard.
by antonycool September 5, 2008 1:51 AM PDT
Yes this is very exiting browser in user point of view but still we are lacking some point if we compare the browser like Firefox like
1. It's only in its first beta.
2. You won't have any add-ons.
3. You can't synchronize.

Thanks
Reply to this comment
by bigpicture September 5, 2008 10:22 AM PDT
Have you used Google? You won't synchronize through any program on the the PC, you will synchronize at sign on to your Google account. How your browser looks and feels and where the cookies and favorites reside will just be an extension of the GMail and Docs type functionality.
by stalepie2 September 5, 2008 3:45 AM PDT
Well, it seems like the desktop OS could be going extinct. Or at least a new kind of animal is afoot: the server OS, which you can access through thin clients, which has all the applications and abilities you have when using Windows or OS-X or Linux on a desktop PC. This incorporates the necessity of sky-drives, however, which is a service I don't believe Google offers yet. Sky-drives as a opposed to "local disks," I mean. I think that the future will offer a multiplicity of options, with some people preferring cloud computing, others preferring old-fashioned desktop computing, and even IBM still trying to sell mainframe computers to various businesses around the world.
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by bob1xxxx September 5, 2008 9:10 AM PDT
OMG please stop, how much is google paying you guys for this excessive shilling of the extermely half bake Chrome. It not jesus , not the comming of the anti christ , Chrome is fast but is a extermely featureless web brouser and thats it . Please stop this moronic shilling of this d- grade browser. UGH!
Reply to this comment
by birasingh September 5, 2008 9:49 AM PDT
if Chrome could bootstrap a computer the same way linux and window do, now that would be innovative.
Reply to this comment
by GetGoogleChrome September 29, 2008 10:09 AM PDT
We believe that one of the behaviors that will change in users is that of browsing through the fist page of search results for the best option, since Chrome gives you the fist result very handy - even modifying your search intentions. We discussed about it here: http://getgooglechrome.com/post/49057079/google-chrome-omnibar-makes-page-one-obsolete
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About Matter/Anti-Matter

Tim Leberecht and Adam Richardson both work for frog design, a consulting firm specialized in designing innovative products and services for Fortune 500 clients. On the Matter / Anti-Matter blog, they engage in a debate around questions they face day-to-day in their work, using convergence/divergence as a lens through which to look at the pressing issues in business, culture, and technology. What makes a successful convergent product or a successful divergent innovation? Is convergence a myth that users don't really care about, or is the current state of convergence just not satisfying enough for them to embrace? How much divergence of innovation is good, and when does it just become confusing? How do you stay on top of people's ever changing needs and wants?

They are members of the CNET Blog Network and are not employees of CNET.

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