November 25, 2009

IBM, Microsoft, Google, Verizon

New Computer Operating System Stores All Data On Google Servers

November 19, 2009

BBC News - Internet search giant Google has lifted the lid on its operating system, known as Chrome OS. The free and open source system is initially aimed at low-cost netbooks and does away with many of the features of a traditional program.

All applications are designed to run in a web browser and all the user's data is stored on Google's servers.

Engineers from the firm said the first computers running the system would be available before the end of 2010...

Google first announced its intention to build an operating system in July this year.

The firm has designed the system around its Chrome browser. The program was released 14 months ago and already has 40m regular users, the firm said...

All programs or applications - such as word processing and e-mail - run in different tabs in the browser.
"There are no conventional desktop applications," said Mr Pichai. "That means you don't have to install or update software.

"It's just a browser; a browser with a few modifications."
Mr Pichai said the system was based around speed, simplicity and security. He showed it booting up in seven seconds.
"We're working very, very, very hard to make that time shorter," he said. "We want Google Chrome OS to be blazingly fast."
He said they wanted it to be like a television, where a computer could be switched on and instantly running and connected to the web.

Google has been able to boost the speed of the system by designing it for specific hardware. The firm said that it would only run on computers using "solid state drives" instead of traditional hard drives.

In addition, the firm has been talking to hardware manufacturers to specify which components to include on finished machines. This means that the company could "optimise" the code to run as quickly as possible, said Mr Pichai...

Any documents and files created on the computer were automatically synced and saved on Google's servers, said Matthew Papakipos, an engineer working on the system.

As a result, he added, anybody who lost their computer would be able to buy a new machine and easily recover all their data.
"In a matter of seconds, all the data syncs back to the machine."
Although the firm envisages most tasks will be done online, it will also offer the capability to use some programs when there is no connection.

It already offers a similar feature for programs such as Gmail and Google Docs using its Gears program.

Initially, the firm envisages people will use the operating system on a second, portable machine.

Memory intensive tasks, such as video editing, would require a more powerful machine.

The demonstration could dramatically change the market for operating systems, especially for Microsoft, the biggest player with about 90% share of the market...

Google derives most of its revenue from selling advertising around search and its other online products. Most consumers will have to wait until 2010 to get their hands on a device running the system. However, the firm used the event to release an early version of the code for developers.
"You can get Chrome OS up and running today," said Mr Pichai...
The Move to Digital Medical Records Begins in Tampa
These incentives will start to phase out in 2011, however, and in 2012, the system will introduce de-incentives: any physician not using e-prescriptions will be penalized by 1% of his Medicare reimbursement.

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