I think I speak for all developers when I say that having to develop for IE browsers sucks. Internet Explorer, unfortunately still the most widely used browser on the internet, has failed the development community and the web in general in keeping up with internet standards. While developers can do some really cool stuff with HTML 5 and open source browsers like Chrome, Firefox, and Webkit-based Safari, IE misses the mark. Unfortunately this goes for even the most recent versions of Microsoft’s browser.
This is why I was really happy to see Google produce a plugin for IE called Chrome Frame, which when installed, loads a Chrome browser within IE for the user giving the user all the added functionality of a modern HTML 5-compliant browser without having to do much at all to switch to a new environment or fiddle with the default browser settings. I think it’s a pretty clever idea.
What I think is even more clever is that Google is now requiring users to install the plugin if they are going to use their upcoming product, Google Wave. When Google Wave launches, if users visit the product in Internet Explorer, they will get a message that looks like this:
I think most users won’t even blink an eyelash to installing it, and, just like Flash or Quicktime or any other type of Internet Explorer plugin they’ll have no problem agreeing and installing it within their browser. This is especially if they want to use Google Wave, something I predict could very well replace Gmail and the way we communicate today in the future. But I think Google should do more.
Let’s take this one step further. I think it would be really cool if Google provided simple HTML/JavaScript code that provides the exact html you see above, that any developer can install on their website. Any developer can do that now by writing their own browser detection code in JavaScript, but let’s make this as easy as possible and standardize it. If users become familiar with this style and look, they will be much less likely to complain and much more likely to install.
As a developer I would be more than happy to install such code on my site, reducing the amount of time I have to spend switching computers to test in IE and messing with entirely different standards, increasing the time I have to develop my app. As an entrepreneur and business owner it’s simply too costly to have to worry about so many different browsers at once. If I could focus on simply the standards and get all the new HTML functionality right now without duplicating my effort in 2 browser environments that would be a huge win for me, and definitely worth the investment. I’d install it in a heartbeat.
So how about it Google? Let’s provide that message and plugin install widget for all developers and make this a much more open and modern web outside of the control of Microsoft. I’m loving where Google is going with this.
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[…] a day to celebrate the open web and bring more awareness to technologies. I just wrote about one thing Google is doing to make the web more open, something I strongly support. I want to touch on something Facebook is doing which I don’t […]
[…] a day to celebrate the open web and bring more awareness to technologies. I just wrote about one thing Google is doing to make the web more open, something I strongly support. I want to touch on something Facebook is doing which I don’t […]
[…] a day to celebrate the open web and bring more awareness to technologies. I just wrote about one thing Google is doing to make the web more open, something I strongly support. I want to touch on something Facebook is doing which I don’t […]
[…] a day to celebrate the open web and bring more awareness to technologies. I just wrote about one thing Google is doing to make the web more open, something I strongly support. I want to touch on something Facebook is doing which I don’t […]
[…] a day to celebrate the open web and bring more awareness to technologies. I just wrote about one thing Google is doing to make the web more open, something I strongly support. I want to touch on something Facebook is doing which I don’t […]
[…] a day to celebrate the open web and bring more awareness to technologies. I just wrote about one thing Google is doing to make the web more open, something I strongly support. I want to touch on something Facebook is doing which I don’t […]
[…] a day to celebrate the open web and bring more awareness to technologies. I just wrote about one thing Google is doing to make the web more open, something I strongly support. I want to touch on something Facebook is doing which I don’t […]
I agree completely that it would be great if Google released that code, but it certainly can not be free to respond to extraordinary window visitors to my site. Particularly those of average users who do not even know themselves to install an RSS reader. That's of course only IMHO.
Promotium, this method is simple though. It's as simple as it would be to
install Flash, for instance. All the user would need to do is click the
button essentially and it starts the process. I think Windows users are
getting very used to this thing and wouldn't have much of a problem.
Promotium, this method is simple though. It's as simple as it would be to
install Flash, for instance. All the user would need to do is click the
button essentially and it starts the process. I think Windows users are
getting very used to this thing and wouldn't have much of a problem.
While I can see it being advantageous having a google chrome plugin/widget on our sites at this time, what about 2 or 5 years from now? I would like to develop code for a standard (moving target of course) that's not tied to one company.
Still, pretty fantastic news. Was this on the Google chrome blog? I gotta subscribe
Mark, HTML 5 is a standard, not at all tied to any one company, and the new
Chrome plugin forces IE to adhere to that standard so you only have to write
for one standard. This was all on the Google Code blog –
http://code.google.com/blog.
Thanks for the feedback Jesse! And we should both be asleep (darn cold keeps waking me up at 2am)
While I can see it being advantageous having a google chrome plugin/widget on our sites at this time, what about 2 or 5 years from now? I would like to develop code for a standard (moving target of course) that's not tied to one company.
Still, pretty fantastic news. Was this on the Google chrome blog? I gotta subscribe
Mark, HTML 5 is a standard, not at all tied to any one company, and the new
Chrome plugin forces IE to adhere to that standard so you only have to write
for one standard. This was all on the Google Code blog –
http://code.google.com/blog.
Thanks for the feedback Jesse! And we should both be asleep (darn cold keeps waking me up at 2am)
[…] Let’s Take This Just One Step Further Google by Jesse Stay […]
[…] Let’s Take This Just One Step Further Google by Jesse Stay […]