Aussie CIOs poke under Chrome bonnet

Australian chief information officers have shown a mixed reaction to Google's new Chrome browser, which was released in testing form last week to early adopters' praise.

"Our guys have looked at it and poked at it. It shows real promise," Bill Robertson, the IT manager of De Bortoli Wines, told ZDNet.com.au in the wake of the launch.

Robertson's IT department has earned a reputation over the past few years for being an early adopter when it comes to hot new technology, adopting Linux desktops and other open-source software packages such as OpenOffice.org and even trialling Google's Web-delivered applications.

Intrigued by some of the design work that had gone into Chrome, Robertson praised Google's move to isolate each browser tab from its brethren tabs for security and stability purposes. The initiative could show up shortcomings in other browsers.

"You can have one misbehaving application tear down the whole Firefox instance," he said.

But the IT manager wasn't keen on some of the security flaws that have already been discovered in Google's code. Robertson's team tested the vulnerabilities in a secure environment and verified their existence. "Yes, they're there," he said. "There are exploits in all browsers. It's the dirty little secret of IT."

In a wider sense Robertson said he saw Chrome as part of Google's attempt to dominate the burgeoning mobile space. "They need this for Android to take on the iPhone," he said, adding Chrome's existence also diminished the value of operating systems such as Microsoft's Windows, because they particularly focused on enhancing the experience of delivering applications such as Google Docs through a Web browser.

You don't want to put your organisation at risk

ECU IT director Mark Ridge

However, not everyone is as hot on Google's shiny new toy.

Edith Cowan University's (ECU) IT director Mark Ridge said the institution's IT department had not yet started testing Chrome. "At the moment, we haven't looked at it," he said.

Ridge said ECU, like other large organisations, rigorously tested any new application for compatibility across its entire operation before it would look at a serious deployment.

"You don't want to put your organisation at risk," he said, acknowledging the security flaws already found in Chrome. "We'll only do it once it's been tried and tested with every application we use in the university, otherwise it's pointless putting it out there."

Glenn Veen, manager of infrastructure and telecommunications at Western Australia's Department of Education and Training said he was aware of Chrome, and several IT staff had downloaded the browser to see what all the fuss was about.

Like ECU, he said the department had not started testing it yet; with more than 800 schools spread around the state Veen's team currently has bigger fish to fry, with a current focus on standardising hardware.

Most large Australian organisations have remained loyal to Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser, with relatively few having migrated formally to Mozilla Firefox, despite the software's popularity in the consumer market. The New South Wales Roads and Traffic Authority is one notable exception and has been running Firefox for several years.

Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!

Advertisement

Talkback 4 comments

  1. Amazing Anonymous -- 09/09/08

    Google farts (which looking at the software, they have) and it is lauded. Amazing - the strength of the brand is quite incredible.

  2. IE had it first Anonymous -- 10/09/08

    I'm getting VERY sick of ignorant fools claiming Chrome's 'tab isolation' thing is a first for an internet browser.
    Even though I don't use it, the beta of MS's IE8 has exactly the same feature and was released to the public a lot earlier than Chrome, and will get out of beta one hell of a lot sooner.
    Heck, even gmail only got out of beta a short while ago after being around for 5+ years.
    Just because google does something DOES NOT mean that its good.
    Anyone reading the EULA accompanying chrome can see that. Google are becoming more and more a company to be wary of, and its chrome browser (based off the same flakey webkit source as apple's safari) is just one more thing users should take a very good look at before blindly installing it.

    1. Flail away MS boy Jason Bourne -- 03/11/08

      IME Microsoft Beta software and Google Beta software are very different. One company's Beta is not another's.
      Time to leave Beta is typical of the churlish arguments put forward by MS fanboys that are basically blind to anything else. At the same time hurling rebuke, and crying fanatic, at anyone who even dares consider anything else, never mind install something. In that case better take Anonymous' advice and be very wary of installing Chrome blindly. (You have to install Chrome to test it BTW).

      Just because Google does something does not mean you should poo poo it either.
      The V8 Javascript engine whipped the pants off anything else at the time it was released, sometimes in the order of 10x faster.

      Off course it doesn't matter what browser you choose, Anonymous. The fact is Google's business is based around web applications, a lot of which are heavily reliant on JavaScript processing. Of course it makes sense to them to build a performance browser. If you want to use a quality web app, you're going to want to choose a quality browser, especially as web apps become more complex.

      The basic fact is that MS are frantically playing catch-up in the web apps market and in browser technology. They dragged their feet for years on ie6, now they have finally their much touted "cloud" and upcoming versions of Office will be online. I'd hardly say they're leading the way (I'm sure some fans will though).

      Unfortunately as much as you like to cry about the world of ignorant fools, you only make yourself look ignorant with your "Beta" arguments, and your pathetic warnings about blind installs, and childish flailings at things like webkit.

      Get off your hobby horse and go back to your blue box.

  3. Odd article Anonymous -- 11/09/08

    Odd article - I'd argue that any CIO losing sleep over what browser their people uses is in the wrong job... this is a business leadership position.. neither of these guys seem that interested...

Add your opinion


Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Alex Serpo Is green IT a marketing fad?
    It seems that green IT has dropped off the radar, with other technology issues moving to the fore. But was green IT ever a real technology movement, or was it just a marketing fad?
  • Array Gutless studios have the wrong target
    I have one word for the Australian Federation Against Copyright Theft (AFACT). Gutless.
  • Array NBN needs workers on board
    Without consensus on labour issues, the eventual winner of the NBN may end up as little more than a lame duck and a cashed-up symbol of the conflict between the desire for progress and the lack of mechanisms to deliver it.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured