Google chrome: a first impressions review.

I like it a lot.

Keeping it non-technical, because someone else will rant about that stuff in more detail than I am willing to or can.

Stuff I am liking:

  • Very fast
  • It is very roomy feeling, not much “chrome” as it were.
  • I don’t have to relearn shortcuts, they are almost all FFish
  • I can open JavaScript bookmarklets in new tabs (this was not the case for FF as of version 3)
  • Searching is awesome, with a bit of setup, its very few keystrokes, like: “w jelly” to search wikipedia for jelly
  • View source pops up in a tab
  • The animations are cute and informative without being annoying
  • the launch page is handy (although Opera has had this for some time)
  • Built in “appability” (make one tab appear as an application window, for something like google docs)
  • Built in tab restore (I constantly close a tab and then realize I want it back)
  • Built in and fairly complete dom inspector, console, and JS debugger
  • The process manager is awesome.  Even when stuff gets out of hand, you can assumably fix it without losing your whole session
  • The find dialogue is great, however it will take a moment or two to adjust to top-right vs bottom-left

Lets get critical*:

  • The inspector, while nice, doesn’t allow me to change stuff on the fly like firebug does
  • There appear to be some JS animation / transparent png issues
  • I can’t do much in the way of scrolling
  • I don’t think the form elements displayed are as attractive as Firefox’s (on Vista)
  • As far as I have seen, there does not appear to be a way for me to view and interact with ajax requests
At least for now, it will be my default browser, however I will still be using Firefox for development purposes. I want chrome to succeed, and to do this it will need to be embraced by and passionately work with the open source crowd.  So far they appear to be off to a cracking good start.  I will follow up with more later when I have used it extensively.

* please note that I am not an experienced webkit-based browser user.

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  1. nocash's gravatar

    I’ve more-or-less come to the same conclusion: Chrome for standard browsing, FF for development. That’s what I’m going to try for, anyway. Chrome’s lack of addons may push be back to FF in the short-term, but I’m coming up with alternatives to the ones that I’m most used to.

  2. williac's gravatar

    I think I’m in love already.

    No major hitches so far. The learning curve is practically nonexistent. It even has spellcheck.

  3. savageaphid's gravatar
    savageaphid Says:

    I had a good time with Chrome. It was quick and clean. I expect this app to move to the top handful of applications running on a regular basis pretty quickly.

  4. Timothy Hatcher's gravatar

    If you like Chrome’s stripped down Web Inspector, you will love the original, full featured version in the WebKit nightlies. (Including double clicking to edit CSS/DOM.) Cheers!

  5. atom's gravatar

    @Timothy

    What I love is Firebug. Let me know when you have it topped.

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GMFDYUI

google mother fucker, do you use it?

An attractive friend of mine pointed out that I hadn’t posted in a bit, so this is what you get.

This is a terribly simple drop in php script that basically just redirects people to Google with a query.

This is useful when someone ask you a stupid question, when it should be obvious that they just need to Google it. You can give them a link that may appear to be useful, but will it only taunt them for being foolish.

example

download

This was inspired by http://justfuckinggoogleit.com/ and of course whoever originally came up with the Samuel L macro. A sarcastic apology to anyone offended by the language in this post. Get off the internet, thank you.

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sxsw day two

The second day was difficult to start, we had quite a first night. Did not manage to make it to anything before noon. Anywho…

attended the contextual web

This was not quite what I expected, I was hoping that this would be more about data portability, but it ended up just being an iPhone orgy. I did however realize that I was in the non-iPhone possessing sxsw minority.

attended ExpressionEngine 2.0 Sneak Peak

This was awesome. I am and have been a big fan of Ellislab, not because of ExpressionEngine, but because of CodeIgniter. Learning about ExpressionEngine was very interesting, especially when they announced that ExpressionEngine 2.0 has been rewritten to run on top of CodeIgniter. This is very pleasant news. This has gotten me all atwitter about the possibilities of a cms running on-top of my most favoritest PHP framework. Also everyone was very nice, and I desired to be friends with them. This panel was something I talked about throughout the rest of my trip.

attended 10 Things We’ve Learned at 37signals

This was another highpoint. CEO Jason Fried is an excellent speaker. Everything he said made sense, and he answered all questions asked were answered very well. At one point Anil Dash of six apart asked a question that seemed like more of an insult than anything.

attended Behind the Scenes at the Onion News Network

This was pretty fun, it being the Onion and all (which had quite a presence in Austin). I was hoping that it was going to be more about the site backend, and not the actual production of the show / a bunch of clips I have already seen.

went to the Google Party

The SXSWi Google Party

Wacky google action, got lots of saucy google swag, including pens, flashing plastic pins, and the best thing I have to keep a secret, because it is a present for my buddy Wes. The bar was kinda downtowny and lame, but I also got to meet Dustin Diaz, and tell him that I love him. His girlfriend liked my hair, and took a picture of us.

went to the EllisLab party at Moonshine Grill

This is the CodeIgniter / Expression engine core team trying to eat while I stalk them.
This was a wonderful event. Tons of bad ass food, free shirts (I nabbed a bunch and wear them all the time). The highlight of this was definitely hanging out with and talking to Derek Allard. Derek is a development beast, and is responsible for alot of the awesomeness in and around ExpressionEngine and CodeIgniter. You should go to his site, it is awesome.

went to the frog design / SXSW Interactive Opening Party

This was a hell of a thing. There seemed to be thousands of people spread throughout a very large area, lots of loud techno music and so forth. The beer line was long, and the beer was green. I think we only managed to stay there for about an hour.

went to the 16 Bit: SXSWi’s Opening Night Afterparty

16 bit: SXSWi Opening Night Afterparty

This was an amazing party, with an equally amazing line to get in. There was a band / freakshow, which eventually turned into silly 80’s music that made me feel like I was playing Vice City. It was good stuff all around, lots of cool excited people and lots of free drinks.

999 eyes: band / freakshow playing at 16bit

Towards the end of the party, I met Matt Mullenweg. I have always been amazed by Wordpress, and generally the stuff he gets into. I got to spend some time talking to him about the future of Wordpress, and vented a little bit about the problems I have had with WordpressMU, chiefly the forced support of the no-www.org agenda. I am not even going to link to it because of how much arrogant bullshit I think it is. It should be noted that normal Wordpress does not enforce this. When I was done going off about that, I launched into a drunken rant about how awesome CodeIgniter and ExpressionEngine were going to get. We were talking until the bar closed, and were yelled at to leave by a scruffy bouncer, and then continued to talk outside until his girlfriend got pissed. Anyhow, Matt was awesome, and much funnier than I expected.

ended up at Kerbey Lane Cafe

We stood outside of Scoot Inn (where the last party was) bullshitting with people for about an hour and suddenly found ourselves among the last few there. Me and Cliff (big bad boss) ended up going to breakfast with two complete strangers. One was a local Austin lady who was recently single (which she repeatedly and proudly exclaimed) and a gentleman who, to me, was the epitome of the apple fanboy. I was later informed that I may have been too rough on him regarding this, but I was drunk and he was a friendly stranger.

I don’t remember what I ate (aside from sweet potato fries), and I don’t remember the stranger’s names. If you are one of the strangers: please excuse me, and leave a comment to say hi.

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  1. Anil's gravatar

    I apologize if my question to Jason seemed disrespectful, but he and I have been friends for years and have had that exact debate many times. I suspect that the reverence many people in the room felt for Jason and 37s might have made what was a fairly straightforward question seem like more of a challenge than it actually was.

  2. atom's gravatar

    @Anil, it is true that the crowd was fawning over him, and prior knowledge of your friendship would have made it seem less of an attack.

    I think more than anything, it was that you didn’t seem to accept his answer.

  3. Bryce's gravatar

    Now my curiosity is piqued. What was Anil’s question?

  4. atom's gravatar

    @Bryce

    Hopefully Anil will be back through to let us know.

    I will not be able to quote this verbatim, so I won’t try very hard.

    From where I was sitting (quite a ways back), the general gist of it was:

    “You are not ambitious enough.”

    P.S.: I have been planning on attending the co-work one of these days for a few kicks.

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