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Software | Posted by Max at Nov. 20, 2009 - 6:58 pm

Seriously, how awesome have the past few hours been? Engadget turns the design stakes up to 11, Google finally dishes the dirt on Chrome OS, and now you can even download the forthcoming software to have a fiddle with yourself. It's completely free, though you'll need VMWare running atop a Windows, Linux or OS X installation to make the magic happen. Naturally, we've been considerate enough to provide download links for everything you'll require at the source below, so get those fingers clicking.

...We've had a chance to have a quick and dirty snoop around Chrome OS and our early conclusions are rather predictable. This really is a browser with an OS attached rather than vice versa. You get your tab-based navigation up top, and the focus is of course on the internet, with minimal option buttons on the far right and app launchers at the top left. Unfortunately, in order to access the more interesting apps, one requires a Google.com login which we do not have, so we were stuck gazing at only the Gmail and Calendar applications. They act and function much like their online counterparts, but for the significant lag and choppiness that may be attributed to the still very early stage of development or the fact it's running on a virtual machine.

My question is: will it play full-screen flash video? I know it's old hat, but seriously, that's the yardstick. It doesn't matter if it has the coolest, bestest note-taking application that reads your mind and arranges your ideas for you (and shares them with Google, natch) if YouTube chops, then it's fail.

Still, time to get the ol' laptop dual-bootin'. Provided it's not based on kernel 2.6.27 or later, 'cause that shit don't support my chipset. You know what does? Windows 7.
[Read Full Story at Engadget]
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