Home > General News Picks, User Services > Everybody is talking about it: “Will Google OS beat Windows?”… I would say YES on many platforms…

Everybody is talking about it: “Will Google OS beat Windows?”… I would say YES on many platforms…

Can Google’s Chrome OS Challenge Windows in the Fast-Growing Netbook Market?

Google’s new Chrome Operating System (OS) represents a direct challenge to Microsoft’s hegemony in the burgeoning market for netbook software, according to iSuppli. Google’s Chrome OS will launch in the second half of 2010 and will initially target netbook PCs. However, the OS will not only run on netbooks based on Intel’s X86 architecture microprocessors, but also those using ARM-based chips, clearly showing the operating system is targeted at very low-cost netbooks….

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Google versus Goliath

The announcement of Chrome sets the stage for battle royale between Google and Microsoft.

“Google’s launch of the Chrome Web browser served as a preliminary bout in the company’s battle with Microsoft, taking on the market leading OS, Internet Explorer,” said Matthew Wilkins, principal analyst, compute platforms research, for iSuppli. “However, with the PC OS version of Chrome, Google is ringing the bell for the main event.

“The arrival of the Chrome OS is a direct threat to one of Microsoft’s main revenue streams: sales of the Windows operating system for netbook PCs. It also comes at a time when Microsoft is on the eve of launching its most promising operating systems in a number of years: Windows 7.”…

Google’s Chrome OS: A boon for wireless operators?

A key aspect of Chrome, and a major differentiator from Google’s Android, is that it runs in the “cloud,” meaning it’s essentially a Web-based OS, rather than one that entirely resides in the actual device’s hardware. This feature also distinguishes Chrome from the new wave of other mobile operating systems.

“The Chrome OS stimulates data traffic usage on mobile devices such as netbooks and Mobile Internet Devices (MIDs) by encouraging users to access applications running on the cloud,” said Jagdish Rebello, senior director and principal analyst at iSuppli. “Because of this, Google’s Chrome OS has the potential to drive increased data usage on netbooks and notebooks in a way that allows operators to monetize this data traffic.

“Revenue from broadband access will be a very important component of the data revenue of total revenues of wireless carriers worldwide. iSuppli projects that global revenue from mobile broadband access will grow to more than $180 billion in 2013, up from $61 billion in 2008.”…”

This news was picked from and details continue @ http://www.cellular-news.com/story/38480.php?s=h

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