Linked by Eugenia Loli-Queru on Wed 8th Jul 2009 05:23 UTC
Google From NYTimes: "In a post on its company blog, Google said the operating system would initially be aimed at netbooks, the compact, low-cost computers that have turned the PC world on its head. It said the open-source software, called Chrome OS, would be available in the second half of next year. Read more for a quick observation on the announcement.
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by zenulator on Thu 9th Jul 2009 18:27 UTC
zenulator
Member since:
2008-06-29

Am I the only one who is excited by this? Google is developing a new windowing system and OS layer on top of the Linux kernel there by essentially doing what Apple and Jobs did with BSD and NeXT. On top of that they are going to be giving it all away for free including source code. Where do you guys pull in negativity from that? I don't get it. We're talking about a small light weight browser centric operating system for low powered atom and arm based netbooks. I'm pretty certain this isn't going to replace Ubuntu or Windows on my desktop any time soon but it might replace or coexist with Windows on my laptop once it's released. I'm a fan of all operating systems from plan9 to haiku. Lately I've been working with android on touch screen arm powered devices. It's something truly magical to see android running on beagle board or a htc touch. I've built and run Android on my notebook and while usable for simple web surfing and some games it just doesn't feel right since it wasn't designed for anything more than smart phones. So I welcome a Google designed Linux based operating system for netbooks and notebooks. Mobile computing is the future and Google is jumping in head first.

Edited 2009-07-09 18:30 UTC