Technology Review - Published By MIT
Advertisement

TR Editors' blog

Insights, opinions, and our editors' analysis of the latest in emerging technologies.

Blog Topics

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

  • cdenver : Your questions are thoughtful and right-on. However there are no easy answers to your questions....
  • crawling : Great muscle building supplementsBodybuilding forum
  • Monsterboy : While I agree with the substance of your argument -- stealing is wrong, and cost should not...
  • Teeno : The security of Macs is actually quiet strong. Even before Snow Leopard the Mac OS runs many...
  • ... : Mood rings were one of the first commercial uses of liquid crystals... currently the dominant...
  • gary7 : I wonder what ever happened to the material used  for color in mood rings. They respond to heat...
  • kbillet : Hum! Stealing is Wrong! Yes! I agree! How about the guy whom creates a software that can make a...
  • dterry : Plants do not use soil carbon directly.  They obtain their carbon solely from carbon dioxide. ...
  • dmm : What a crock of BS!  People in countries like Pakistan (not to mention the U.S.) certainly DO...
  • ... : Diamonds are made from carbon and they don't bio degrade all that fast. Small tubes of carbon as...
Advertisement
Thursday, September 24, 2009

Google Speeds Up Internet Explorer

Google's Chrome Frame plug-in makes Internet Explorer almost 10 times faster.
By Kristina Grifantini

A new plug-in from Google called Chrome Frame, released on Tuesday, makes Internet Explorer 8 run 9.6 times faster, according to benchmark tests done by Computerworld.

According to the Computerworld article, Google released the plug-in so that IE users would see better performance when using an as-yet unreleased tool called Google Wave. The plug-in, which users can download here, installs a version of the Javascript engine and HTML 5 functionality from Google's own browser, Chrome, inside IE (it doesn't work with all web pages, however).

Microsoft has responded to this rather embarrassing blow by stating that the Google Chrome Frame introduces severe security issues. In an interview with ARS Technica, which has a skeptical take on that claim, a Microsoft spokesperson says:

"Given the security issues with plugins in general and Google Chrome in particular, Google Chrome Frame running as a plugin has doubled the attach area for malware and malicious scripts. This is not a risk we would recommend our friends and families take."

Advertisement
Thursday, May 28, 2009

Google Aims to Remake Online Communication

Wave, a forthcoming Google product, promises to do it all.
By Kate Greene

At the Google I/O developer conference today, Google demonstrated a new product called Wave that essentially combines e-mail, instant messaging, wikis, discussion boards, and collaborative documents into one Web service. Created by the developers of Google Maps, Wave works within a Web page, using HTML 5 capabilities supported by browsers like Chrome and Firefox. Lars and Jens Rasmussen and product manager Stephanie Hannon showed off the sprawling capabilities of the product to enthusiastic developers during the keynote presentation.

Still very much a work in progress, Wave will launch publicly later this year. But the features showed off during the demo were impressive.

Wave can be used as an e-mail service, and it even looks something like Gmail, which organizes e-mails based on the conversation thread, but it can also turn into an instant-messaging service on the fly, depending on who in the thread is online. Dragging and dropping photos into a message shares them almost instantly. Wave can also be integrated into blogs and connect to services like Twitter; comments posted by you and others can show up on your Wave homepage, giving the product the potential to collate all of your disparate conversations around the Web.

Additionally, Wave can be used to create, share, and edit documents within a message, just as one would write an e-mail. These updates can be viewed by collaborators in real time, and a feature called playback allows people to view each change one at a time, although the default mode is set to see the document after the most recent edit.

Importantly, Google released an application programming interface for developers today so that they can build gadgets that plug into Wave, similar to the way that add-ons work in Web browsers. The examples of gadgets included collaborative sudoku and chess games, but it's easy to imagine all the types of applications found on Facebook translating to the Wave environment. Another demonstrated gadget was a semantic spell checker that analyzed the phrase "open a can of been soup" and suggested "bean" instead of "been." And Lars Rasmussen showed off a real-time translator that converted his English instant messages into French, and his friend's French messages into English.

It remains to be seen, however, how most Internet users will perceive the product. If they see it as yet another way to have a real-time interactive conversation, 脿 la Twitter, they might reject it. A balance will need to be struck between speed and constant interruptions, admits Rasmussen.

Another potential challenge that Wave will need to overcome is the fact that it is truly a sprawling collection of features, capable of doing so much. This will make it difficult to package as a product. In the case of Wave, it seems as though Google is betting on its developers to build simple applications that can help consumers get the idea.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Log In

Forgot your password?     Register »
Advertisement
Technology Review September/October 2009

Current Issue

The TR35
Technology Review presents its ninth annual list of leading young innovators.
•  Subscribe
Save 36%
•  Table of Contents
•  MIT News
» Gift Subscription
» Digital Subscription
» Reprints, Back Issues
» Subscribe
» Table of Contents
» MIT News

More Technology News from Forbes

Advertisement
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology © 2009 Technology Review. All Rights Reserved.