In a pretty interesting turn of events, Google seems to have beaten Microsoft to the punch with the latest release of Google Chrome. Not only have they beaten them to version 9, but they have also caught up substantially with their support for HTML5 to the point where comparing Internet Explorer 9 to Google Chrome 9 renders the IE9 Test Drive site fairly unimpressive. For those unfamiliar with the IE9 Test Drive site, its the demo site that shows how much faster IE9 is over other browsers. I have to admit on a few tests, Chrome 9 performed better that IE9.
Google Chrome has jumped in popularity over the last year, surpassing 10% market share, this month, while Internet Explorer continues to slide, now with only 56% market share.
Could all of this have been predicted years ago? I think so. Our industry has changed from accepting complex bloat software with thousands of features you will never use, to expecting software and interfaces to now the reality of the day where:
Clean, Simple, Responsive, and Intuitive Interfaces Rule.
We are clearly starting to see a shift in technology and software, where “simple” and “clean” is the new standard. Fast and responsive is now the expectation, not the exception. Apple has capitalized on this immensely. The iPod, a simple and intuitive device that was clean, simple, and responsive. The iPhone, a simple and intuitive device that was clean, simple, and responsive. The iPad, not so much a revolution as Apple would like you to believe, but yet again, a simple, clean, elegant device that was responsive and had the battery life every laptop owner would die for.
Need another example of how clean and simple beats complex, bloaty, and ugly every time? Facebook focused on clean, simple, and intuitive and took down a goliath in MySpace, that at the time nobody would have believed was possible.
The reasons Google Chrome will surpass Internet Explorer in the next few years (maybe year) are clear, and simple to explain.
- Chrome has a very clean and simple interface.
- Chrome crashes very little, and when it does, it crashes elegantly.
- Chrome downloads and installs very quickly.
- Chrome development is very agile, releasing early and often.
- Chrome is very intuitive to use. It lets the web pages speak for themselves.
- Chrome lets you synchronize bookmarks with a few clicks.
I’ve been using Internet Explorer 9 for some time now, and while there are some impressive accomplishments around this latest release, there are still many issues that need to be addressed. Furthermore, Google Chrome 9 now has hardware accelerated graphics, Chrome Instant (an awesome feature that loads web pages you frequent extremely fast), and Chrome Web Store!
Microsoft has nailed a few wins last year with Kinect, Windows Phone 7, XBOX, Windows 7, SharePoint 2010, and Office. The main reason for all these wins was a focus on User Experience instead of focusing on how many features to cram into the software or technology.
In a world when the Web and the cloud is the new reality, one would think Internet Explorer would see some more significant progress, quicker and faster than Google. Google released their first browser two years ago while Microsoft has been in the browser game for almost 17 years. Maybe this makes Google more agile, lean and open to new ideas.
For now, It seems like the blows keep coming fast and furious now, hot on the heels of the “Bing copies Google” fiscal. One has to wonder what affect having the founder back at the helm of the company has had on Google.
For now Google Chrome is still my default browser. It just works. It’s simple, clean, and very responsive, and now works very well with HTML5. Chrome 10 will undoubtedly ship before IE 10 ships, and it will raise the bar even higher. The question is what is Microsoft’s answer?


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