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Saturday, 11 August 2012

Google Chrome Blog] Next step in the Chrome OS journey


Google Chrome Blog] Next step in the Chrome OS journey

Last year we announced
a new kind of computer
This is the next step

All of you haiku fans (like many of us on the Chrome team) can stop here; the rest can read on for more details.

A year ago we introduced a new model of computing with the launch of Chromebooks. We’ve heard from many of you who’ve enjoyed the speed, simplicity and security of your Chromebooks at home, at school or at work. (Thanks for all the wonderful feedback and stories!) Today, we wanted to share some developments with you—new hardware, a major software update and many more robust apps—as we continue on our journey to make computers much better.

Next-generation devices
Our partner Samsung has just announced a new Chromebook and the industry’s first Chromebox. Like its predecessor, the newest Chromebook is a fast and portable laptop for everyday users. The Chromebox is a compact, powerful and versatile desktop perfect for the home or office.


Speed
Speed is integral to the Chrome experience. The new Chromebook and Chromebox, based on Intel Core processors, are nearly three times as fast as the first-generation Chromebooks. And support for hardware-accelerated graphics, a built-from-scratch multi-touch trackpad and an open-source firmware stack provide a much faster and more responsive computing experience. The new Chromebook boots in less than seven seconds and resumes instantly. With the Chromebox, you can be on a video conference while continuing to play your favorite role-playing game on the side.

An app-centric user interface
With the new user interface you can easily find and launch apps, and use them alongside your browser or other apps. You can pin commonly-used apps for quick access, display multiple windows side-by-side or experience your favorite apps in full-screen mode without any distractions.


Be much more productive...or not
  • Get more stuff done, online or offline: With the built-in ability to view Microsoft Office files and dozens of the most common file formats, you can access all your content without the hassle of installing additional software. Google Drive makes it easy to create, store and share with just one click. Drive will be seamlessly integrated with the File Manager and support offline access with the next release of Chrome OS in six weeks. With Google Docs offline support (rolling out over the next few weeks), you can keep working on your documents even when offline and seamlessly sync back up when you re-connect. In addition, there are hundreds of offline-capable web apps in the Chrome Web Store.
  • Have more fun: The revamped media player and a built-in photo editor and uploader enable you to easily play and manage your personal media collections. Through the Chrome Web Store, you can access entertainment apps such as Google PlayNetflixKindle Cloud Reader and Pandora, and thousands of games including popular games like Angry Birds and console titles such as Bastion.
  • Carry your other computers...inside your Chromebook: With Chrome Remote Desktop Beta, you can now securely connect to your PC or Mac from your Chromebook or Chromebox. With the underlying VP8technology, it’s almost like you’re in front of your other computers in real time.
The (always) new computer
We’ve released eight stable updates over the past year, adding a number of major features and hundreds of improvements to all Chromebooks through our seamless auto-update mechanism. There’s a lot more on the way, so all you need to do is sit back and enjoy the benefits of the (always) new computer.

For those who want to try the Chromebook and Chromebox first-hand, we’re expanding the Chrome Zone experience centers. In the U.S., Chromebooks will be available to try out in select Best Buy stores in the coming weeks. In the U.K., they’re now available in a growing list of PC World and Currys stores.

Starting today, you can get the new Chromebook and Chromebox from our online retail partners in the U.S. and U.K., and in other select countries over the coming weeks.



Posted by Linus Upson, Vice President, Engineering and Caesar Sengupta, Director of Product Management

Chromium OS Blog] Accelerated CSS Filters Landed in Chromium


[Chromium OS Blog] Accelerated CSS Filters Landed in Chromium

CSS filters are a powerful, easy-to-use visual effects tool for web developers. Filters can manipulate the appearance of any HTML element and can be stacked together to create unique effects -- all with a single line of CSS. Chromium GPU accelerates these filters to make them super fast. CSS filters are new in Chromium 19.

The current set of supported filters in Chromium include many that are familiar to web developers with image processing experience, such as sepia, saturation, opacity, and blurs. If you’re a web designer looking to add dynamic visuals to your next page layout, a developer building a photo editing app, or a game developer looking for an easy way to add effects to your next title, CSS filters can help you get there easily.


img { -webkit-filter: sepia(100%) contrast(200%) blur(5px) }

GPU acceleration of these filters brings their performance to the point where they can be used for animating elements in conjunction with CSS animations powered by -webkit-transition or even HTML5 video tags.

To get a sense of how much you can do with CSS filters, check out this interactive abstract painting app.


For more info on CSS filters, including a full list of those available in Chromium and how to use them, check out the new CSS Filter tutorial on HTML5Rocks.

Google Chrome Blog] Apps, themes and vuvuzelas


Google Chrome Blog] Apps, themes and vuvuzelas

This summer, with the European Soccer Championship just about to start, staying up to date with soccer will be even easier thanks to soccer apps from the Chrome Web Store. UEFA Euro 2012™ by Carlsberg365 Scores, and Eurosport can provide you with news, scores and highlights. Who Will Win? lets you show support for your favorite teams and vote for match winners. And for those of you who have a knack for virtual goals, check outStriker Manager and some of our other soccer games.
If you’re a soccer fan, you can get these and other apps in the Chrome Web Store’s Soccer collection. If you don’t have Chrome yet, you can download Chrome with soccer apps here.

Posted by Alexey Shelestenko, Product Marketing Manager and Soccer Fan

AS400/TN5250 emulator app for chrome os?


AS400/TN5250 emulator app for chrome os?


I just bought a chromebox as a test unit for work and I am trying to see if anyone knows of a tn5250 emulator to connect to an as/400 system. I love the box so far and I think that even the mental giants I work with can navigate through this simple system. Our entire company system is an ibm as/400 though so if I can't find an app to connect to this then it does me no good. Any thoughts or ideas?

If it helps at all, I use Mochasoft's tn5250 emulator on my galaxy nexus but they don't support chrome os.

The only slight chance I have seen so far is a remote desktop connection in which I would still have to have a windows pc near the chromebox which does me no good : (

Any help is greatly appreciated

[Chromium OS Blog] Try Chrome in Metro mode


[Chromium OS Blog] Try Chrome in Metro mode

Back in March, we began work on a Metro-style enabled desktop browser, a version of Chrome that will run in both the Metro and desktop environments of Windows 8 on x86. (Chrome won’t run in WinRT, i.e. Windows 8 on ARM processors, as Microsoft is not allowing browsers other than Internet Explorer on the platform.) If you’re running the Release Preview of Windows 8, you’ll be able to try Chrome in Metro mode in the next Chrome Dev channel release by setting it as your default browser.



The initial releases of Chrome in Metro mode will include integration with the basic Windows 8 system functionality, such as charms and snap view. Over the next few months, we’ll be smoothing out the UI on Metro and improving touch support, so please feel free to file bugs. We’re committed to bringing the speed, simplicity, and security of Chrome into Windows 8, and we look forward to working with you on it. 

Newbie problem installing Chrome OS on Dell Inspiron Mini 10


Newbie problem installing Chrome OS on Dell Inspiron Mini 10

My wife inherited a Dell Inspiron Mini 10 which she is no longer using. It has Windows 7 installed and works ok but is very slow.


Personally all my machines are Macs but I was very interested in installing Chrome OS on the Dell. I have downloaded ChromiumOS_x86_April15_2012 and used ChromiumOS_x86_April15_2012 to build a bootable USB stick but get the following message whenever I try to boot from the USB stick:


I'm new to this so forgive me if I'm missing something obvious in the process or doing something stupid

Chromium OS Blog] Chrome@IO


[Chromium OS Blog] Chrome@IO

Google I/O is just around the corner and all of us in the Chrome team are looking forward to sharing with you what’s new with the open web.

Starting from June 27, we’ve planned more than 20 sessions and code labs. If you are not joining us in San Francisco, you can still watch some of these sessions by attending one of the 350+ I/O extended events or by simply tuning in to the livestream from anywhere in the world. You can also watch these sessions when you are on the move by downloading the Google I/O mobile app.

All other sessions are going to be recorded. Videos from these sessions will be available after the conference onGoogle Developers Live and the I/O website.

Finally, you can follow our Google+ page and Twitter account for more behind the scenes coverage.
Let the fun begin!

Posted by Brian Rakowski, (Miami) Vice President Product Management 

[Google Chrome Blog] New senses for the web


[Google Chrome Blog] New senses for the web

What if web apps could see? What if they could hear? In today’s Chrome Stable release, when you give thempermission, they can.

Chrome now includes the getUserMedia API, which lets you grant web apps access to your camera and microphone without a plug-in. The getUserMedia API is the first step in WebRTC, a new real-time communications standard which aims to allow high-quality video and audio communication on the web.

The getUserMedia API also allows web apps to create awesome new experiences like Webcam Toy and Magic Xylophone. In Chrome Web Lab, if you're on the latest version of Chrome, the Sketchbots experiment uses getUserMedia to let you take a picture of your face, which is then converted to a line drawing and sent to a robot in the Science Museum in London. The robot then draws out your portrait in a patch of sand, which you can watch live on YouTube and visitors can watch in person at the museum. It’s just about as crazy as it sounds, and twice as cool.

Once you've taken your picture, it's transformed into a line drawing a robot can understand using HTML5 canvas.


Your portrait is then drawn by one of the eight Sketchbots in London. You can choose to be sent a video of the whole process.

[Chromium OS Blog] Ending mixed scripting vulnerabilities


[Chromium OS Blog] Ending mixed scripting vulnerabilities

Last year, we posted on the Google Online Security Blog about our desire to end mixed scripting vulnerabilities. A “mixed scripting” vulnerability affects HTTPS websites that are improperly implemented; these vulnerabilities are serious because they eliminate most of the security protections afforded by HTTPS. All web browsers have historically taken it upon themselves to try and work around these bugs by informing or protecting users in some way.

With the recent release of Chrome 21, we’ve taken several steps forward:
  • We continue to protect end users by blocking mixed scripting conditions by default, but we now do it in a way that is less intrusive. This change minimizes “security dialog fatigue” and reduces the likelihood that users will expose themselves to risk by clicking through the warning.
  • We’ve improved resistance to so-called “clickjacking” attacks. Electing to run any mixed script is now a two-click process.
  • We now silently block mixed scripting conditions for websites that opt in to the HSTS security standard. This is the strongest default protection available.
If you visit a non-HSTS web site with a mixed scripting condition, a new shield icon in the omnibox (to the right, next to the star) indicates that Chrome’s protection has kicked in:



You can click on the shield to see the option to run the mixed script, but we don’t recommend it. Instead, if you see the shield icon, we recommend contacting the website owners to make sure they know they may have a security vulnerability.

It has been an interesting journey to get to this point. For about a year, we blocked mixed scripting by default on Chrome’s Dev and Beta channel releases. Rolling out the block to Stable was more challenging because of widespread mixed scripting across the web. To move forward, we turned blocking on for certain web sites, starting with google.com. Later, we reached out to and then collaborated with twitter.com andfacebook.com to opt them into blocking, too. All these websites hold themselves to a high standard of security, so this approach worked well. We later took the additional step of opting in sites to mixed script blocking for any site using the HSTS standard.

We bit the bullet and let full mixed script blocking for all sites hit Stable back in Chrome 19. Predictably, we uncovered a range of buggy web sites, and some users were confused about the “infobar” warning displayed by the older versions of Chrome:



Fortunately—and no doubt driven by the high visibility of this warning—some prominently affected websites were able to deploy quick fixes to resolve their mixed scripting vulnerabilities. This work aligns with one of our Core Security Principles: Make the web safer for everyone. Unfortunately, the warning confused some users, which conflicts with another principle: Don’t get in the way. (We’re sorry for any temporary disruption.)

With Chrome 21, we believe we’ve achieved a good balance between top-flight protection for end users, a pleasant UI experience, and notifications that help buggy websites improve their security.

Posted by Chris Evans and Tom Sepez, Software Engineers 

[Google Chrome Blog] An even more secure Flash Player for our Windows users


[Google Chrome Blog] An even more secure Flash Player for our Windows users

One of the great things about the web is that you can hop from page to page watching videos, playing games, or checking email without installing additional software that may pose a security risk to your computer. On the Chrome team, we’ve made it our mission to build a browser that helps protect you every step of the way, defending against pages that try to install malware or steal information without your knowledge.

Some of the most important things keeping you safe in Chrome are Safe Browsing, auto-updates, and sandboxing. Our goal is to improve each of these features, staying ahead of the bad guys to help keep you safe online.

With last week’s Chrome Stable update, we took a major step forward in security by bringing an even deeper level of sandbox protection to Adobe Flash Player on Windows. Since 2010, we’ve been working with Adobe to sandbox the Flash Player plug-in to protect users against common malware. Now, thanks to a new plug-in architecture, Flash on Windows is inside a sandbox that’s as strong as Chrome’s native sandbox, and dramatically more robust than anything else available. And for the first time ever, Windows XP users have a sandboxed Flash, making them much safer online.

Chrome OS has had this deeper Flash sandboxing from the beginning, Linux has had it since Chrome’s last stable release, and Mac support is on the way. Ultimately, this means a safer experience for you as you browse the web. We take the security of Chrome extremely seriously, so we’re excited to be delivering these enhanced protections, and we’ve enjoyed collaborating with Adobe on this effort.

Posted by Viet-Trung Luu, Software Engineer and Protector of the Realm Interwebz

[Chromium OS Blog] The road to safer, more stable, and flashier Flash


[Chromium OS Blog] The road to safer, more stable, and flashier Flash

A little more than two years ago, engineers on the Chrome team began a very ambitious project. In coordination with Adobe, we started porting Flash from the aging NPAPI architecture to our sandboxed PPAPI platform. Withlast week’s Chrome Stable release, we were finally able to ship PPAPI Flash to all Windows Chrome users, so they can now experience dramatically improved security and stability as well as improved performance down the line.

To appreciate just what a big step forward this is, it helps to understand a bit more about the history and architecture of NPAPI plug-ins. At its core, NPAPI is a thin layer of glue between the web browser and a native application. In the early days of the Web this provided a tremendous advantage, because it allowed third-party plug-ins to evolve rapidly and implement new capabilities, moving the whole web forward.

Unfortunately, as the web evolved, the past benefits of NPAPI became liabilities. The thinness allowed legacy browser and OS behavior to bleed through and crystallize to the point that it hamstrung future improvements. As browsers add compelling features like sandboxing, GPU acceleration, and a multi-process architecture, the legacy of NPAPI severely impedes or outright prevents us from extending those improvements to any pages with plug-in content.

By porting Flash to PPAPI we’ve been able to achieve what was previously impossible with NPAPI for the 99.9% of Chrome users that rely on Flash. Windows Flash is now inside a sandbox that’s as strong as Chrome’s native sandbox, and dramatically more robust than anything else available. And for the first time ever, Windows XP users (specifically, over 100 million Chrome users) have a sandboxed Flash—which is critical given the absence of OS support for security features like ASLR and integrity levels.

Beyond the security benefits, PPAPI has allowed us to move plug-ins forward in numerous other ways. By eliminating the complexity and legacy code associated with NPAPI, we’ve reduced Flash crashes by about 20%. We can also composite Flash content on the GPU, allowing faster rendering and smooth scrolling (with more improvements to come). And because PPAPI doesn’t let the OS bleed through, it’s the only way to use all Flash features on any site in Windows 8 Metro mode.

Moving forward, we’re finishing off the PPAPI Flash port for Mac OS X and hope to ship it soon. And Linux users have already been benefiting from PPAPI Flash since Chrome 20, along with Chrome OS users who have been running it for almost a year. Soon all Chrome users will have access to the improved security, stability, and performance of PPAPI Flash.

Posted by Justin Schuh, Software Engineer and Boring Security Guy

[Chromium OS Blog] The evolution of Chrome packaged apps


[Chromium OS Blog] The evolution of Chrome packaged apps

Just over a month ago, at Google I/O, we announced significant changes to Chrome’s packaged application platform. These changes are intended to allow apps to break out of the browser, work offline by default, and enabzle richer, more immersive experiences.


Check out our overview video for a quick intro to the new platform.

With the latest version of Chrome in the developer channel, you can build, load, debug and test your apps without command-line flags, although you may need to enable experimental APIs in some cases. Because we’re still in developer preview mode, the Chrome Web Store doesn’t yet accept uploads of these new packaged apps. We’ll enable web store support later this year, and when we flip that switch, users will be able to discover and download your apps directly from the store.

In order to get started building apps, visit our developer documentation at developer.chrome.com/apps and check out our growing list of sample applications on Github (thanks for the pull requests; keep them coming). If you’d like to reach us while you’re building apps, you can join us on the #chromium-apps Freenode IRC channel, join the chromium-apps group or report an issue.

We’re also starting a regular weekly hangout every Tuesday at 9:30am (Pacific Time). Our first one will take place on Tuesday, August 14th. You can add a reminder to your calendar and then tune in at Google Developers Live. And be sure to add +Google Chrome Developers to your circles to keep up on the latest from the Chrome team.

Posted by Mike Tsao, Evolved Software Engineer 

How Madden can be made a simulator viably


How Madden can be made a simulator viably

One of the biggest reasons why EA seem reluctant to really go all out and make Madden (or an off shoot franchise) a simulation focused experience is because of the mass market appeal factor - the average gamer wants realism, but not at the expense of fun and pick-up-and-play ability. In this sense, I've always thought of Madden as the NFL gaming equivalent of Call of Duty - it's meant to sell, and that's that.

And you know, despite making that parallel to CoD, it never really clicked in my head until recently that the same way the FPS genre handles simulations could possibly work for NFL gaming.

What do I mean? Well, there are shooters out there which focus on realism as the primary concern. It takes a lot more work to do this and the games are not as popular as CoD. But they exist, and the reason for this is some of these games are actually aimed at professionals - that's right, military people, contractors, security firms, etc. One such game is ARMA on the PC.

Can you see where I'm going here? What if there is a market out there to make a football game which everyone from NFL teams down to junior league teams could use to develop strategies? Run scenarios? Collect data and determine probabilities? It would have to be pretty well made, but I think it could be done to a high enough degree that it would have a place in the ever progressing world of football, and could eventually develop into a serious tool in time. EA would probably have to do it as they have the resources and the baseline in Madden to get a head start, and could market it still with the Madden name, although I guess anyone could really do it without NFL licensing.

It would probably be for PC for data collection and control/editing purposes, but it could be treated as "software" more so than a game - so if you're a professional team, the license cost could be in the thousands, just like Adobe's software is for professional designers etc. It would still be available for normal gamers though, and sold at normal game prices - just like ARMA is.

Personally, this is why I believe EA is criticized. They have the resources to try and do something like this and I truly believe this is a seriously viable option going forward. Chalk it up as a future building project which could develop very nice long term returns - perhaps the NFL isn't quite willing to adopt such a thing just yet as a whole but I would bet anything there are a few teams who would jump on this and get in early. Who knows, NFL teams may even start to directly invest in it.

Minding the gap: Bridging Computing Science and Business Studies with an Interdisciplinary Innovation Challenge


Minding the gap: Bridging Computing Science and Business Studies with an Interdisciplinary Innovation Challenge


For today’s information technology organization, working in teams across functional and even organizational boundaries has become an integral part of every project. When asked about these projects, practitioners regularly report on how grave differences between business professionals and tech- nology teams have negatively affected project performance. The serious gap between how the two sides think, talk and work is systemic already in the training and education of both Business and Computer Science students at the univer- sity level. This paper describes the design of a competitive SFU Innovation Challenge which aims to bridge that gap by tasking interdisciplinary groups to create iPhone application prototypes and related business innovation roadmaps. This document then summarizes the objectives of the SFU Inno- vation Challenge, and reports on the difficulties and posi- tive results that materialized when students combined their technological problem- solving techniques and managerial strategies for effectively confronting real-world problems.

2005 Methodological Approach for Mobile Studies


2005 Methodological Approach for Mobile Studies


Studies about mobility and mobile interaction help researchers and practitioners in the social sciences to make sense of emergent working and living practices in an increasingly mobilised world. This paper aims to present a reflective analysis of the recommended methodological approaches for mobile studies based on three case studies. Following mobile workers across the different dimensions of time and space is a major challenge researchers have to face. The paper discusses these challenges, and highlights areas of interest for researchers interested in the study of mobility and mobile interact

System Architecture


System Architecture


Different applications and disconnected databases, leading to redundancy, increased costs, and overall organizational dysfunction. To rebuild and simplify IT systems, use a common layer of middle-ware that connected the company\’s electronic brain (IT) to its physical body (Operations). Sitting on top of the old transaction systems, the middle-ware carried key operational data from one application to another; Customer, Vessel and Flight schedules, contracted rate between customers and service providers, Documentation, Third party integration, Billing, Accounting and Customer visibility portal. With this replace older system where necessary, without disrupting the underling IT.

2005 Methodological Approach for Mobile Studies


2005 Methodological Approach for Mobile Studies


Studies about mobility and mobile interaction help researchers and practitioners in the social sciences to make sense of emergent working and living practices in an increasingly mobilised world. This paper aims to present a reflective analysis of the recommended methodological approaches for mobile studies based on three case studies. Following mobile workers across the different dimensions of time and space is a major challenge researchers have to face. The paper discusses these challenges, and highlights areas of interest for researchers interested in the study of mobility and mobile interaction.

Free TV Show Idea: The Obsessive Compulsive Time Traveler


Free TV Show Idea: The Obsessive Compulsive Time Traveler

I was reading a story about a guy whose been obsessed for 50 years with building a time machine to warn his dad not to smoke.
Someone brought up the point that if the guy was one day successful, wouldn't his father have not died?
So that gave me the idea for a new TV show: The Obsessive Compulsive Time Traveler.
It's about a guy who travels back in time to make sure previous events still happen correctly, because he's afraid if he doesn't things will go wrong and the present will be wrecked. He's not right in the head, plus he's got a time machine, like a combination of Monk and Voyagers!.
It practically writes itself. Every week he get himself into hilarious new predicaments where he has to fix the history he just broke. Plus you can learn about history and stuff ("To learn more about Sam Houston, visit your local library."). All I ask is the producer thank me when they win their Emmy.

"Agile is treating the symptoms, not the disease"


"Agile is treating the symptoms, not the disease"

Where is this decade's Access?It may seem like a snarky and trolling question, but think about it for a moment: for a decade or so, I was brought into project after project that was designed to essentially rebuild/rearchitect the Access database created by one of the department's more tech-savvy employees into something that could scale beyond just the department.
(Actually, in about half of them, the goal wasn't even to scale it up, it was just to put it on the web. It was only in the subsequent meetings and discussions that the issues of scale came up, and if my memory is accurate, I was the one who raised those issues, not the customer. I wonder now, looking back at it, if that was pure gold-plating on my part.)
Others, including many people I care about (Rod Paddock, Markus Eggers, Ken Levy, Cathi Gero, for starters) made a healthy living off of building "line of business" applications in FoxPro, which Microsoft has now officially shut down. For those who did Office applications, Visual Basic for Applications has now been officially deprecated in favor of VSTO (Visual Studio Tools for Office), a set of libraries that are available for use by any .NET application language, and of course classic Visual Basic itself has been "brought into the fold" by making it a fully-fledged object-oriented language complete with XML literals and LINQ query capabilities.
Which means, if somebody working for a small school district in western Pennsylvania wants to build a simple application for tracking students' attendance (rather than tracking it on paper anymore), what do they do?

CouchDB on your TV


CouchDB on your TV

After initially getting rejected for sound issues, Google Ads has finally approved our awesome Couchio commercial.
Popout
GoogleAds Commercial Version
So we've aired this commercial 11 times so far, 5 times during Robot Chicken, twice duringAqua Teen Hunger Force, once during Tim and Eric's Awesome Show, Great Job! and 3 times on VH1.
It has gone to a total of 321,253 impressions, which means 321,253 people have seen Chris running like a lunatic around the streets of Oakland, singing the CouchDB praises.
This has cost us a total of $709.57!
Just saw a commercial for CouchDB. Seriously. I'm at a loss for words. #couchdb #couchio@jrgarcia
Someday CouchDB will actually be inside your TV, you can watch CouchDB while watching your CouchDB TV from your couch.Yo dawg.

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