The Chrome OS is here -- sort of. This week, Google was kind of enough to
give the world a sneak peek at its nascent desktop operating system. And after
months of speculation (and more than a few bogus screenshot galleries), I can
finally say that I've seen the future ... and it's not Chrome OS.
The preceding statement should come as no surprise to readers of my Enterprise
Desktop blog. I came to a similar conclusion months ago. When news of the
existence of a Google OS project first leaked out, I gave it an ice cube's
chance in hell of succeeding. Now, after watching a sometimes touchy-sounding
crew from Google's Mountain View, Calif., headquarters walk us through the ins
and outs of the Chrome OS, I'm more convinced than ever that my original
assessment was right on the money.
[ InfoWorld's Neil McAllister reports from Google HQ the known details of the
Chrome OS and Google's planned Net appliances. ]
Fatal flaw No. 1: The Linux foundation
First, there's the core architecture. A derivative of Linux, the Chrome OS
builds on Linus Torvald's popular open source foundation to create a
lightweight, Web-oriented desktop environment. However, it also inherits that
platform's many warts, including spotty hardware compatibility.
From power management to display support, Linux has long been a minefield of
buggy code and half-baked device driver implementations. Google recognizes this
fact and, in a page out of the Apple Macintosh playbook, has taken the draconian
measure of allowing the Chrome OS to be distributed exclusively on a series of
as-yet-undisclosed netbook-like devices.
It's a move born of desperation. Google knows it can't possibly establish a
viable hardware ecosystem and still meet its self-imposed release deadline of
"mid-2010." So rather than do the hard work of courting device vendors and
building certification processes, Google is taking the easy way out by
micromanaging which systems will be allowed to ship with the Chrome OS and then
dumping responsibility for the rest of the ecosystem onto the open source
community.
Fatal flaw No. 2: The Web user interface
Then there's the user interface. Google looks at the world through the prism of
a Web page. So it comes as no surprise that the primary interface to the Chrome
OS is ... Chrome, as in the Google browser. Unlike a traditional OS, there's no
desktop. The "applications" running under the Chrome OS are really just
interactive Web pages, with the Chrome browser's tabs serving to separate and
organize them visually on the screen. Basic configuration tasks, like defining
Wi-Fi settings, are handled via Chrome OS-hosted pop-up windows, while a simple
status bar-like strip at the top of the display informs you about battery life,
connectivity status, and so on.