Posts tagged as:

google

googlechromeGoogle Chrome and Google Docs have not only increased web-based use, but they have spurred their competitors to build products that bring users onto the web more and for longer periods of time. In fact, it’s rumored that Microsoft Office is coming to the Cloud very soon. Google Docs changed the game, and Microsoft reacted.

Google hopes for the same reaction from Microsoft and Apple to Chrome OS. Its biggest selling points, directly from Google, are that it will “get you onto the web in a few seconds,” that “most of the user experience takes place on the web,” and finally that “all web-based applications will automatically work and new applications can be written using your favorite web technologies.”

This doesn’t sound at all like Google’s trying to build a competitor that users will choose over Microsoft. Instead, it sounds like its goal is to get people onto the web faster and for longer. Getting you to spend more time on the web is why Google based its OS on Chrome. You can expect that Microsoft and Apple will incorporate the best features of Chrome OS in their future iterations. That’s exactly what Google wants (and by the way, since Chrome OS is open-source, Google’s making it easy).

As long as you’re on the web, Google wins. So we need to stop framing the Google-Microsoft battle in the context of “Chrome OS vs. Windows,” because Google will not win a straight up battle. And guess what? That’s not Google’s goal. We need to frame it in the larger context of the Google Revenue Equation and how much time we spend on the web.

Chrome OS is just another step in getting us online, both directly and indirectly. If you view the battle with this in mind, then you realize that Google will almost certainly succeed. Google will have won once again.

{ 0 comments }

androidT-Mobile MyTouch 3G with GoogleT-Mobile and Google held a joint event this morning to argue that the Android mobile operating system is gathering momentum even in the face of the iPhone’s rapid growth.

T-Mobile showed off its latest Android smartphone, the T-Mobile MyTouch 3G with Google, which is available for preorder now and goes on sale later this summer. The MyTouch is faster, thinner, has no physical keyboard, and has a brighter touchscreen than the T-Mobile G1, the first Android phone which went on sale eight months ago. Beyond that product, there are about 18 to 20 Android phones debuting around the world later this year.

As such, Android has barely begun its assault on Apple’s iPhone fortress. Andy Rubin, the chief Android executive at Google and vice president of mobile engineering platforms (pictured above right with panel moderator Dan Gillmor), said at the event that Android’s main advantage over Apple continues to be its openness and its ability to draw in a large number of hardware partners, carriers and developers into its fold.

We’ll have more conversations with T-Mobile and Google at our MobileBeat conference on Thursday.

“In the end, it’s a numbers game,” he said, in reference to competition with the iPhone. “History has shown a single product has limits on how the numbers can scale. The power of Android is there can be 1,000 different products built on Android. The magic is they are all compatible….There could be 1,000 killer apps. The user gets to decide which ones they want to use.” [click to continue…]

{ 0 comments }