Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 7th May 2009 08:24 UTC
Internet & Networking When Google released the first version of its Chrome web browser, many eyebrows were raised over the fact that it updated itself automatically and silently, in the background, without user intervention or even so much as a notice. As it turns out, this has been a brilliant move by Google, as Chrome users are the most likely to have up-to-date installations of their browser, followed at a respectable distance by Firefox users. Safari and Opera trail behind significantly.
Permalink for comment 362261
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
RE[4]: No Thanks
by ephracis on Thu 7th May 2009 12:24 UTC in reply to "RE[3]: No Thanks"
ephracis
Member since:
2007-09-23

Yeah, I hate that Ubuntu and Firefox can't update themselves quietly. I always have to click stuff and it interrupts my workflow. I don't even read the list of updates in Ubuntu anymore, it's never anything interesting anyway.

The problem gets worse when you get new updates 5 days a week. I have been really close to ignoring the icon and that's bad.

Ubuntu had a great philosophy on their new notification system (the computer should not tell the user what to do, the user should tell the computer what to do). Why not apply that on updates as well?

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 3