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Chrome OS and Android "Will Likely Converge" In the Future

xchg writes "When Google first announced that the company would be pursuing development of two distinct operating systems, many questioned Google's motivation. 'Google executives, including CEO Eric Schmidt, have downplayed the conflict ever since, asking for time to let the projects evolve. And a few days after Chrome OS was revealed, Android chief Andy Rubin said device makers "need different technology for different products," explaining that Android has a lot of unique code that makes it suitable for use in a phone and Chrome has unique benefits of its own. But Brin, speaking informally to reporters after the company's Chrome OS presentation on Thursday, said "Android and Chrome will likely converge over time," citing among other things the common Linux and Webkit code base present in both projects.'"

2 of 155 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Google is suffering from success by V!NCENT · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Kernel: Linux
    WM: Chrome
    GUI kit: HTML + CSS
    Media player: Flash and OGG
    Graphics library: WebGL
    Application store: The internet with Google Gears
    Coding language: Javascript
    Backup: automatic online gratis storage

    Need I even say more? Yes;

    Chromium needs semantic file management and a better use of tabs (WM's that can only display fullscreen Windows sucks) and the ability to hook up an extrenal storage device and a one-click-offline-backup-solution and a better way to store webapps offline with Gears.

    Okey... 'nuff said. If there is anything that could on the long run kill proprietary, monoplies, vendor lockin, etc, etc. then it is Chromium.

    Not that I would make it my primary OS is the near future, but it will be installed on my netbook for sure...

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    Here be signatures
  2. Re:Which will win? by corpsmoderne · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't think Chrome OS is a good thing for desktop Linux. Who will develop for an OS on which you can't install any applications ? Commercial vendors won't target Chrome OS / Linux, they will target the web browsers, and that won't have any impact on the "monoculture" problem of the desktop.