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Google To Air Chrome Ads On TV

mikesd81 writes "Google plans on advertising with spots promoting its Chrome browser this weekend. Google Japan had already released a 30-second video promoting Chrome on YouTube, but the company will distribute that video through the Google TV Ads network this weekend as an experiment to see if it can drum up interest in Chrome. Google advertised their browser on the New York Times' website on Wednesday."

9 of 148 comments (clear)

  1. Re:I'm not sure why this is such a big deal by PleaseFearMe · · Score: 2, Informative

    It is interesting because advertising its own products is not something we generally associate with Google. And this one is especially nice. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNnrFwlTPvY&feature=channel_page

  2. Re:How about actually getting the mac version out? by Annymouse+Cowherd · · Score: 2, Informative

    Browser chrome means the browser UI. The term originated in Firefox, where it is used in the urls for extensions and browser XUL (e.g, chrome://browser/content/browser.xul )

  3. Re:At last Spyware for everyone ! by eric-x · · Score: 3, Informative

    I forgot: memory usage. As a java developer I have to run a few memory sucking applications such as an IDE. The main thing that made me switch to chrome was that I got tired of restarting ff because after a while it would have eaten a significant amount of memory.

  4. Re:How about actually getting the mac version out? by saddino · · Score: 3, Informative

    Chromium (the open source basis for Chrome) is available to download and compile, and you can also download unofficial binaries if you're really dying to see how Chrome for OS X is coming along.

    And if you want to experience what a one-process-per-tab feels like on the Mac, you can check out the Chrome-inspired OS X browser, Stainless.

  5. Re:Advertising is 100% tax deductible in Canada. by yourassOA · · Score: 2, Informative

    No there is a loophole the truck can be used for personal provided you keep a kilometer log and report to the government how much of your total kilometers was to earn business income. For example 50,000 KM cost me $14,000, 60% of KM were to earn business income so $8,400 is a tax deduction. And I get to drive a truck I couldn't afford otherwise thanks to a loophole for large construction and oil-field companies. Seriously when you see large company fleets they are usually just a way for the company to pay less taxes (some of these companies are writing off thousands of trucks) and hey driving a new truck around feels better than paying taxes.

  6. Re:On the Contrary by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 1, Informative

    Hi! I'm Chrome! I come without all the plugins you depend on to protect your privacy, and without those to accelerate every other browser function except JavaScript execution!

      AdBlock Plus
      BetterPrivacy
      Cache Search
      FoxyProxy/TorButton
      Ghostery
      Greasemonkey
      DownloadThemAll
      FasterFox
      Firebug
      Launchy
      Stealthier
      TabMixPlus
      YSlow

    I don't run FireFox, but an individualized web tool kit that Chrome will NEVER provide. Why re-invent the wheel a a way to simply stealth more advertising and information theft by Google, the largest private investment the NSA ever made?

    --
    "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
  7. Re:I'm not sure why this is such a big deal by CSMatt · · Score: 2, Informative

    It is very unlikely that you will ever see Chromium in the Debain repositories. Two outside programs that the browser uses are under the BSD Protection License, which Debian has not classified as a license that passes the Debian Free Software Guidelines.

  8. Hulu Add by Aramil+Moonmist · · Score: 2, Informative

    I just saw the chrome add for hulu the other day, and I must say, I love chrome and I like the idea of them advertising it, but the comercial just kinda looked goofy.

  9. Re:On the Contrary by something_wicked_thi · · Score: 4, Informative

    Why? It's either a troll or satire.

    The "individualized web toolkit" is webkit, which is used by KDE, Nokia, and Safari.

    Chrome is getting extension support (albeit not Firefox compatible) real soon now.

    Furthermore, Chrome has Greasemonkey support to a degree already. See http://mashable.com/2008/12/15/google-chrome-greasemonkey-scripts/

    Finally, Chrome has better privacy than Firefox in some ways because it has an anonymous browsing mode, and it's more secure because of the process and sandbox model they use. Firefox is working on that, but they're a long way behind.

    Really, Firefox is falling pretty far behind many of the other browsers at this point. Don't get me wrong - it's still a good browser, and way better than IE, but all that it's got going for it now is the extension framework. Safari and Chrome are both way faster than Firefox. Even IE has a better process model (Firefox runs everything in a single thread, which is why it gets really sluggish with a lot of open tabs, or when one tab is really CPU heavy). Firefox is also a huge memory hog and, at least on Linux, is pretty unstable.

    Again, most of these things will be fixed if they can fix their process model, but I expect that's a long ways off. They've got a lot of catching up to do.