Jalaj P. Jha Technical & Miscellaneous Ramblings

12Dec/089




Download Google Chrome 1.0 Offline Installer

Google Chrome 1.0 (oh it just came out of Beta) is as promising as any other Google product. Want to install it? Just go the the Google Chrome Home Page and if a relase is available for the platform you are running then a button "Download Google Chrome" button will appear. Click it and and after accepting terms and conditions stated in EULA a 476kb file will start downloading a 476kb sized installer.

However this executable is not a standalone installer and requires you to be online while installation is carried out so that it can download the actual installer. Ever wished that you could have got that actual installer so that you didn't require to download each time you install Google Chrome on different machines?

Here is the link for Full Google Chrome 1.0 Installer.

For downloading for Platforms other than WinXP/Vista you will require to go the Google way to install the browser using download page at http://google.com/chrome

12Dec/083




Google Chrome Beta No More

Did the title sound weird? Yes it should, if you thought Google has ended the it's Chrome product. It's just that it is now Google Chrome 1.0 removing the Beta label.

Just a few days back someone asked me if a stable release of Google Chrome (i.e. not a Beta) is available? I smilingly replied "Google has it's products in Beta for at least an year or two, adding more and more features until the product turns out into a master-piece. Since, Google Chrome just unveiled on Sept 3, it's far from getting it's beta status removed."

Today, I was shocked to read at Google Operating System (Unofficial News Blog) that Google Chrome 1.0 Released... Was it a joke? Not really! I followed to Official Google Blog that said the same thing.

I think that Google Chrome is the first Google Product to get out of Beta in just 15 releases. Isn't it? Why? Because the Sky is High! and to reach to the top in the Browser Market this product needs to be bundled with systems sold by major companies who shy away due to Google Chrome being in Beta, as explained by TechCrunch.

What does this mean to us? Well to users with Operating System Configurations lower than WinXP with SP2, "nothing" as they still have to live without Chrome. To users already using Chrome it would be the same product in new wrapper (and minor fixes), and to web developers out there who need to maintain cross-browsers compatibility in their work (assuming they care for stable non-beta products only), an additional browser to fight with.

By the way, the Google Chrome Home Page at http://google.com/chrome still show an image showing "Google Chrome Beta" logo... Seems that they were too busy in the release to change the image.