Things I Learned:
- They borrowed some UI concepts from Opera and IE (controls and address bar inside the tabs, speed dial, paste-and-go) but I think they've done some things better. For instance: the default home page requires zero user interaction, the status bar is only present when you hover over a link, tab cycling makes sense and requires zero thought.
- They really didn't want to introduce another rendering engine for developers - so Google is simply using WebKit, it won't be a fork
- No tie-ins to Google Services installed by default
- They've been working on it for two years
- V8 will eventually make its way into Android
- They haven't made very many contributions to Webkit, but are fully committed to doing so. Their plan is to build Chrome off the WebKit tip
- Extensibility - though they obviously support traditional browser plugins and they have plans for a richer extension API - it won't be in the Beta.
- UA String is: "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.0; en-US) AppleWebKit/525.13 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/0.2.149.27 Safari/525.13" =>Google, please work to shorten the UA string, not lengthen it (is there really any valid reason for "Safari/..." to be there?)
- The browser is fast. Transition is seemless. I like that the default home page requires no user interaction to generate. Ctrl+L, Ctrl+K, Alt+D, Ctrl+T all work as I expected.
- They are using an older version of WebKit (older than Safari 3.1 it looks like) as there are two SVG-related rendering problems with my site that I thought were long gone
- They have a sense of humour (open up the Chrome Task manager and see the link at the bottom)
Further Exploration:
- I'm curious how browsers like IE and Chrome are ensuring that access to the browser cache is shared efficiently across all processes?
- I'd like to learn more about the 'cross-platform' graphics library that they are using, does it support hardware acceleration?
- Are other browser vendors worried that the editor of the HTML5 spec is now an employee of a browser vendor?
- What are Google Chrome's plans for feeds? At the moment, there isn't even any auto-discovery