Google Launches Chrome OS Pilot
        
        
        
        		Google has launched a pilot test program for Chrome OS, which may offer an alternative to  traditional operating systems such as Microsoft's Windows desktop OSes. Google  is giving away notebooks running Chrome OS to those who sign up and qualify at this page. However, the number of devices  offered between now and January is limited, according to Google representatives.
The Chrome OS test units contain no branding and aren't for  sale yet. According to Google's  announcement, Chrome OS notebooks will become available "in the first  half of next year" from Acer and Samsung, and other manufacturers will  also produce units. Sundar Pichai, Google's vice president of product  management, said in a Google press briefing that Chrome OS was designed to span  a number of devices and form factors.
The Chrome OS notebook test units, which are built on  specialized "CR48" hardware, feature 12.1-inch screens, full-size  keyboards, eight-hour battery life, and built-in 3G wireless access through  Verizon. The Verizon plan was described as a pay for what you use-type plan,  with 100  MB of free data every month for two years and no contracts to sign.  There is even one-day access priced at $9.99, Pichai said. Users can switch  between 3G and WiFi wireless access. The devices use Qualcomm's Gobi modem technology, which is designed to allow notebook users access to the  Internet wherever they have mobile phone service.
Startup and shut down of a Chrome OS notebook was near  instantaneous in the demo at the Google press conference. The devices lack  traditional hard drives and instead use solid-state drives. They also lack caps  keys and function keys on the keyboard. Users access Chrome OS through a Google  account, but the company is also working on standards such as OpenID. Setup is  quick. Users choose an ISP, a log-in name, and password, and then take a picture  of themselves. The device is ready in "less than 60 seconds." Pichai  said that he could compare that setup time with the time needed to set up a PC,  but it would take too long.
Bypassing Windows
Chrome OS doesn't use any other underlying operating system,  such as Windows or alternative Linux-branded OSes. It connects directly to the  Web. For that reason, Chrome OS could turn out to be a potential Windows  killer. 
Google's last major announcement was the open  source release of Chrome OS in November of last year, where the vision of  connecting directly to the Web, without the long bootups and shutdowns  associated with traditional operating systems, was laid out. While conventional  OSes are typically needed for everyday activities such as printing, Pichai  described the existence of cloud-based printing support for Chrome OS called  "Google cloud print," which is currently in beta.
Chrome OS notebooks appear to be mostly aimed at the  consumer market. However, the devices are already being tried out by a number  of businesses and organizations, including American Airlines, Kraft, Logitech,  and the United States Department of Defense, among others. Pichai cited CIO  complaints about the time spent by IT personnel in having to install software,  maintain updates and ensure security. He opined that the Chrome OS model  offered a total cost of ownership model for organizations that is "a  couple of orders of magnitude" better than deploying conventional OSes and  apps. 
Chrome OS connects to applications located on the Web. The  Chrome team actually defined "native applications," in the context of  Chrome OS, as "Web applications." Even though there are no installed  apps on a Chrome OS notebook, Google will allow "jailbreaking." For  instance, there is a hardware switch on the device that will allow other  software besides Google's to be installed.
As described last year, Chrome OS will provide security  through automatic updates of the operating system. In addition, plugins will  be exposed through Chrome OS' sandboxing security-boundary technology. Browser  plugin technologies, such as Adobe Reader, will access PDFs through this  sandbox technology, it was explained at the press conference. A demo during the  event by Ryan Rakowski, director of product management at Google, showed instant  access to long PDF documents, including the 1,990-page U.S. healthcare-finance  reform bill. Chrome OS also automatically updates the Adobe Flash Player. Flash  files are partly accessed through the sandbox at present.
As part of the update process, Chrome OS undergoes a  so-called "verified boot" on startup, and Pichai said that Google hopes  to be the first company to ship this technology. The verified boot checks for  changes to the system. It leverages read-only firmware on the device, which  can't be modified by software.
"We are confident that when we ship Chrome OS it well  be the most secure consumer OS," Pichai said. 
Chrome OS also comes with security for data. By default, all  user data is encrypted, Pichai explained. There also is no need to install  drivers with Chrome OS. The Google team's model for Chrome OS is to eliminate  that requirement, according to the Q&A.
Eric Schmidt, Google's chairman and CEO, briefly described Google's  cloud vision at the press conference. He said that Google was reluctant even to  build a browser, but that Google is one of the few companies that can address  the Internet cloud with scale. He tracked the general cloud effort to a 1997  announcement by Oracle of the "network computer." The problem back  then was not realizing what it would take to build great Web apps. However, now  with HTML 5 entering the picture (the spec is currently at the Working Draft  stage), it is "finally possible to build powerful apps on top of a browser  platform," he said. "Even Microsoft has announced its success,"  Schmidt added.
Chrome Web Store and  Browser Updates
  Google had a couple of other announcements to add to the  Chrome OS news. Developers will have a place to sell their Web apps for Chrome OS  notebooks through the new Chrome  Web Store, which is currently open for business. Pichai said that about 500  apps had already been created. These Web apps would typically run in any Web  browser, and aren't just specialized for Google Chrome. The store is currently  open for the U.S.  market, but Google indicated  plans for broader access "early next year." Store  access will be featured in Chrome to help people discover apps, Google's  announcement explained. 
The press conference featured some Chrome Web Store apps,  including Amazon's Kindle for the Web reader application, which will be  launched early next year. Kindle is presently available just as a device-based  reader, but it will eventually run in Chrome OS notebooks via the Chrome Web  Store app. The New York Times has  also created a reader available through the store that leverages HTML 5 and CSS  3 technologies.
Google also announced that that its "Google instant"  search feature, in which the query is executed as the user types, will be  rolling out in "the next few weeks." Google instant will be part of  the "omnibox" search/address bar in the Google Chrome Web browser. A  Google engineer denied during the Q&A that Google instant constitutes a  privacy breach, as Microsoft engineers have alleged. "Those claims are  misled and baseless--there's nothing interesting we can glean from  that," said Linus Upson, Google's vice president of engineering. 
Google's JavaScript engine in Google Chrome, called  "V8," has been improved. The speed has been doubled, according to  Google's announcement. Pichai said that V8's performance was 16 times faster  than Microsoft's Internet Explorer at the time of release. This JavaScript  performance improvement soon will be generally available to Google Chrome  users, like the Google instant feature. Google automatically updates browsers  about every six weeks or so. Part of the reason for the performance improvement  is the use of Google's "crankshaft" enhancement technology, Pichai  said.
Google Chrome browser use has grown from 40 million users to  120 million users, the company announced. That represents a 300 percent growth  rate since January of 2010, according to Pichai.