Google and Microsoft have gone from searching to online advertising, office software, and mobile operating systems. In addition to searching, the free Internet-based products launched by Google later are hard to hit Microsoft. Google has high hopes for the new Chrome browser. Google insiders "we study IE8 vulnerabilities every day and then follow its vulnerabilities. If it is complicated, we will make the interface super simple. If it is slow, we will strive to increase the speed. If it is not open-source, we must open-source ." It seems that Chrome's competitor is IE.
Is that true? In just 24 hours after chrome was launched, it had an impressive 1% market share in the browser market. In addition, Firefox and Safari, rather than IE, were greatly affected by the popularity of chrome browsers.
A few days after chrome was released, I also downloaded one to see if it works. After chrome is installed, the first impression is that the interface is simple and Google-like. However, many Chinese websites comply with IE standards, therefore, Chrome is not compatible with some scripts that run normally in IE.
In the face of the special Chinese market, we are looking forward to seeing the development prospects of chrome in the next few months. Chrome will continue to win the hearts of more Firefox users, or will users fall in love before chrome becomes more mature and return to Firefox? Will chrome also capture mainstream IE users? What will happen to the Safari browser when chrome of Mac is released?