Online software vendors enthusiastic about Chrome

By C.G. Lynch, CIO.com |  SaaS, Chrome 2 comments

Makers of online software say Google's Chrome Web browser will likely work well with their products. They are confident many of their customers will adopt Chrome as Google adds more features in the coming months.

From Google's point of view, the creation of Chrome centered around providing a good avenue to access Web applications, as opposed to older browsers designed to view static webpages with text-based features (such as newspaper articles). This issue is of particular interest to Google since its software suite, called Google Apps, currently being sold to businesses, eventually may compete with Microsoft Office.
In its comic strip promoting Chrome, the company noted that older browsers weren't designed to handle the rich features of the Web that we have today.

"People are watching and uploading videos, chatting with each other, playing Web-based games," the comic strip says. "All these things that didn't exist when the first browsers were created."

While Chrome might not affect the Web browser market drastically just yet, and though it offers sparser features than Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox or Safari, it might gain traction with companies that use online software, also known as software as a service (SaaS), or which use the latest buzzterm, cloud computing. But for users to choose Chrome, the online software vendors need to make sure their apps work well on it.

One such vendor, Zoho, makes a wide range of Web-based applications that bleed into competitive areas with Google and Microsoft. Zoho provides e-mail, documents, spreadsheets, wikis and customer relationship management (CRM) software to its customers.

Raju Vegesna, Zoho's chief evangelist, is very optimistic about Chrome and encourages his service's users (and there are now 1 million) to try it. The reason he cited: JavaScript, the programming language that is used for many of the interactive features on the Web, runs "very fast" on Chrome.

"I see Zoho running very well on Chrome," he says. "As JavaScript executes faster, our apps become faster with not much tweaking from our side. This is great news for all Web apps."

Ross Mayfield, president and co-founder of Socialtext, a company that makes wikis and other collaborative apps for businesses, has begun looking into Chrome but doesn't officially support it yet. But Mayfield, too, is optimistic about its prospects.

"Because of Chrome's speed and ability to fail gracefully when running multiple Ajax apps, we at Socialtext welcome the innovation and competition to the browser market. All browsers will trend towards being rich-experience operating systems for the Web," he says.

The "fail gracefully" comment refers to the fact that traditional browsers, often overrun from too much JavaScript (or at least too much of it that's poorly written), can crash, losing all the user's work. According to Google, this happened because browsers haven't supported multiple processes that well. In other words, if a browser loads JavaScript in one application, it has to complete that process before it lets you fully open another tab and Web application.

According to Google, the Chrome browser handles multiple processes and doesn't crash your whole browser when one app fails.

While vendors, especially those of the Web 2.0 variety, have begun embracing Chrome and are enthusiastic about its future, Sheri McLeish, a Forrester analyst, says that Chrome will have a long way to go with businesses since so many have planned their apps around Microsoft's Internet Explorer.

"There is a lot of enthusiasm and excitement over Chrome, particularly on the technical side," McLeish says. "The speed with which pages are served up is really fast. But this is a beta release. It will take some time to mature and may take some time for enterprises as they view their investments in IE."

2 comments

    lmettler
    lmettler 3 years ago
    It is important that browsers are designed to better deliver web based services. Everyone benefits from that.
    Anonymous 3 years ago
    We just wrote an article in our SaaS Blog todoOnDemand about how SaaS vendors benefit from Google's Chrome.The article: SaaS and ChromeRegards.

      Add a comment

      Post a comment using one of these accounts
      Or join now
      At least 6 characters

      Note: Comment will appear soon after you have activated your account.
      Obscene/spam comments will be removed and accounts suspended.
      The information you submit is subject to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.

      ITworld LIVE

      SaaSWhite Papers & Webcasts

      White Paper

      The Journey to the Private Cloud

      Both business and IT need the agility enabled by the private cloud. Now you can apply technologies and processes pioneered by public cloud services to your own data center.

      Webcast On Demand

      Navigating the Public Cloud

      InfoWorld contributing editor and consultant David Linthicum offers expert advice about choosing services to outsource to the public cloud providers, cloud data security and identity, integrating public cloud services, and how to avoid provider lock-in.

      Sponsor: Intel

      White Paper

      Moving Service Management to SaaS

      Today, organizations can enjoy similarly substantial benefi ts by migrating their IT service management functions to a software-as-a-service model. This paper shows how Nimsoft Service Desk enables organizations to make the most of this opportunity.

      See more White Papers | Webcasts

      Ask a question

      Ask a Question