November 24, 2009

How Microsoft could kill Google's Chrome OS

Here's a scenario for how Redmond could combat Google's Net appliance OS before it gets out of the gate

Thin is in again. At least that's the message I'm taking away from the full-frontal media orgy surrounding last week's Chrome OS demo. Virtually everyone who's anyone is now singing the praises of the smaller, lighter, Web-centric desktop model at the heart of Google's still unreleased "Windows killer." And that includes Microsoft.

In fact, the folks up in Redmond are doubtless watching the entire spectacle with amusement. After months spent shadowboxing a Chrome OS vaporware ghost, the company finally has a tangible, non-ethereal target to shoot at. And shoot it will -- with both barrels.

[ Get all the details on Google's forthcoming Chrome OS from InfoWorld's experts: "Google's Chrome OS: A Web appliance, not a PC" | "Top 5 Chrome OS myths debunked" | "Google Chrome OS: InfoWorld's visual tour" | "Why Chrome OS will fail -- big time" | "I want my Chrome OS Web appliance" ]

The assault will begin with a faux olive branch. Microsoft will welcome Google to the game and emphasize how they're really not competitors because Chrome OS is targeted at a niche market. But behind the scenes, Microsoft will be quietly marshaling its troops for war. Its first order of battle will be to fire up the FUD engines and lay siege to Google's credibility.

The opening salvo will try to tie Chrome OS to desktop Linux, an unpopular platform and one that Microsoft vanquished early in the netbook revolution. By emphasizing the ugly Linux underpinnings of Chrome OS, the company can scare away less technical customers who are used to a computing environment that works seamlessly with virtually any device or peripheral.

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endeavour 24-Nov-09 4:13am
Go with what works is right! Embrace, extend, extinguish.
acamfield 24-Nov-09 8:28am
The opening salvo will try to tie Chrome OS to desktop Linux, an unpopular platform and one that Microsoft vanquished early in the netbook revolution. By emphasizing the ugly Linux underpinnings of Chrome OS, the company can scare away less technical customers who are used to a computing environment that works seamlessly with virtually any device or peripheral. Thanks for the laugh! But if this wasn't satire or drug induced ramblings, you might want to rethink trying to be persuasive by listing a competitor's strengths and insulting your customers at the same time. But, actually, that is the Microsoft way, isn't it?
gabimb 24-Nov-09 10:00am
Since the debut of .NET platform, I have loved Microsoft. Meanwhile, I am begining to reckon with Google lately. Moreover, I have been thinking of learning their new programming language (Go) as well. That said, I don't think Microsoft will kill Chrome. Chrome will simply be new Linux. Google is the only company that will take Linux to a new world. However, average users will only know it to be Google OS. Anyway, I welcome Google to compete with Microsoft. This is the only way Microsoft will continue to make good products, in order to stay in business. Long Live, the Free Enterprise. It is the best way to sustain companies to make good products. Period.
cmaurand 24-Nov-09 1:53pm
It won't make any difference. The chrome OS will only run on a device that Google will be happy to sell you. The whole point is moot. Worse if you use it for general computing, you'll be giving over all of your personal data to a data mining and advertising company. So not interested and it won't be any kind of competitor to anything that Microsoft is doing except on smartphones where they are hopelessly behind anyway.
fleminra 25-Nov-09 12:55am
Even if this scenario plays out, Google wins because it migrates people away from Microsoft's cash cows: Windows (heavy edition) and Office (heavy edition). Microsoft won't survive in its current form if it has no heavyweight OS monopoly to which it can bundle it's "me-too, better-late-than-never" products.

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