There’s been a lot of bad air between Google and Apple, the two future dictators of the world, particularly since Google brought out details of their new phone, which got Steve Jobs all scared. “Make no mistake they want to kill the iPhone.” He said as his mouth foamed and he stroked his knuckles while rocking in a darkened corner. Probably not, but paranoia swelled through what resembled a modern day Harfleur speech, promising that he would not allow Google space in the market, forgetting that competition is what makes capitalism worthwhile. He’s a spoilt child under the assumption that he owns that particular corner of Currys, asserting that, “We did not enter the search business,” implying that Google have broken some sort of unspoken war treaty, and now must be punished and crushed by the wrath of Apple. And his latest war machine prepared to be launched: … a big iPhone. That you can’t call people on. He’s a techno-racist to the point that he’s called Adobe lazy, and blamed Flash for the reason Mac’s sometimes crash. He hates them so much that his iPeriod doesn’t support them, like a ‘whites only’ inn.
Meanwhile, Google has been engaging a war of their own on Internet Explorer, which they want to see pretty much dead. It’s created the revolutionary and eagerly anticipated emailing system Google Wave that will destroy Outlook and MSN, and it’s made so brilliantly that Internet Explorer doesn’t have the capability to cope with it. But, this isn’t a new war. For a few months Google has been attacking IE, particularly with its Google Chrome Frame download which pretty much takes IE and kicks it until it’s a competent web browser.
To this, Bill Gates got scared and insisted that the Frame made everything dangerous and more susceptible to hackings or whatever, probably also while rocking in a corner and stroking his hands, which would not be surprising given how Gates started out in the business, credited for being the first arsehole to charge people for code and programs. Just remember, in the early days, it took a bunch of lawyers to stop Gates from becoming a market dictator.
Really, both Gates and Jobs are simply military politicians, Heads of State’s with armies, up against the agile guerrilla militia of Google. Here’s a test to show you what I mean; Microsoft has Bill Gates, Apple has Steve Jobs, what is Google’s equivalent? I would bet a lot of money that a lot of people wouldn’t have a clue.
And now, Google has just launched the Google Extensions; brilliant little add-ons, carefully named Extensions instead of, hmm, Apps, that allow you to customise your browsing experience. One brilliant one is a twitter API called Chrome Bird that adds a simple little blue bird to your perfectly simple Chrome Browser toolbar, and turns red when you have a new unread tweet, and instantly shows you that tweet if it’s @ addressed to you. You can also have translating extensions, Google Map extensions, even extensions that will wipe each internet page you visit clean of all ads. Some of them hideaway and some of them sit quietly on the tool bar, but none of them really intrude on Google’s minimalistic and calming environment.
My main problem with IE has always been that it’s too busy with too many toolbars and too many boxes that you don’t need. The Google extensions allow you to download what you need, and only clutter your screen as much as you allow them to. Some of them aren’t even completely necessary. I have an extension called ‘Lights Out’ which, when I watch a video, at a press of a button, allows me to dim the rest of the page, except for the playing video, which is nothing more than a nice touch. Chrome Bird isn’t even ‘necessary’. Google was and is so efficient that I could type ‘t’ in the search/address bar, hit enter, and I’m at my twitter feed. Chrome Bird just makes it more … distracting, in a nice way. It gives you a reason to procrastinate a little, and really that’s what we want, we don’t care about being efficient. Given the choice, people will pick a muffin over a calculator, and happily munch away while trying balance their cheque book on sticky chocolaty fingers.
Of course, I haven’t used the Google phone, and the Google OS sounds intriguing, but I haven’t much of a clue of what it’ll involve. However, everything Google does always sounds so much more interesting and honest than Apple’s new things for the anally fixated that must stroke everything, or Grandpa Microsoft’s further attempts to be one of the cool kids. Plus, Google change their logo on holidays. Awesome, huh?
PnL.x
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