bd55 wrote:Once it gets on notebooks and people get used to it, it should not be difficult to jump into the desktop. The challenge will be exactly to get people used to it. True that no linux distro has been very successful, but none has had Google behind. Chrome is already growing much faster than FF did at the same stage and it will keep on doing so. In the eyes of a regular user, it will not be some strange company behind some even stranger operating system. This will be a name regular people are more likely to recognize and there it will find its strength. However I do not believe that (even if it turns out to be a big success) we will be seeing much in the short term.
OpenSUSE has Novell behind it and pushes for use on business/corporate level with SLED:
http://www.novell.com/linux/
That still hasn't taken off and I am quite the fan of OpenSUSE. It was by far the most easy to use Linux OS. Two thumbs up for OpenSUSE but I only used it on my Latitude D610 laptop and wouldn't consider it for a desktop.
True, Google is a more popular name but it just won't have the applications/driver support that is pretty much required for a desktop. Maybe a laptop would be suitable but the problem is that a LOT of people use laptops now as their primary system so it would need a LOT of application support. Unfortunately that falls under Windows.
Netbooks are plain and dull and only require internet and email use. That is where Chrome OS would excel, especially for email. Problem with that is that laptops have now fallen to the price of the netbook price range ($399) so netbook sales have suffered because of that. Now the mobile phone market is taking off by leaps and bounds (iPhone 3GS, Palm Pre, Blackberry) for email and internet use that is ultra portable. So that will take away a lot of sales for a netbook with Chrome OS.
The Chrome browser unfortunately will have zero effect on Firefox. Firefox has superior speed and customization with extensions. It has been eating away from Microsoft IE since it went 1.0 (when I first switched to it). Chrome will, however, eat away from IE6/7/8 users. Microsoft must be desperate at this point. They don't need to worry about OS market share though with an absolute wonder of an OS out now, Windows 7.