At an event today here in the city's Dogpatch neighborhood Google showed us the not-yet-finished hardware that will run Chrome OS. It's called CR-48, and it's not much to look at: a plain, black, unbranded notebook that companies and individual users who are accepted into Google's pilot program can use.
But we did learn about a lot of features we'll eventually see in the hardware when it does arrive:
- Every Chrome notebook will work with Verizon 3G service. Each user gets 100MB of free data per month for two years. You can also buy different plans, the first starting at a day pass for $9.99. There are no overage charges or cancellation or setup fees.
- There are options to have different user IDs on the same machine as well as a guest mode with completely private ("Incognito") browsing.
- Your experience with setting up and using Chrome will be the same no matter what machine you're using. Everything is synced through the browser.
- They worked hard on tying the browser directly to the hardware for security purposes. There is auto updating, sandboxing at the OS level, and all user data is encrypted by default.
- There's also something called Verified Boot. Verified Boot makes sure that the OS is in the read-only firmware of the computer, so no software can modify it. When you boot Chrome OS, it checks to make sure nothing has been modified. Google is calling it "the most secure consumer operating system that's ever been shipped."
The store is integrated with the Google Checkout payment system so you can just click to buy and download apps. Some subscription apps have free trial mode, and some, like the New York Times app, work offline.
The Web Store will be ready for anyone to use "later today," according to the event host, Vice President of Product Management Sundar Pichai. It's made to work with the Chrome browser, but it does work with other "modern browsers," according to Google.
We also got an update on Chrome browser features:
- Automatic updates
- Browser sandboxing. If a bad piece of code gets in your browser it won't be able to get to the rest of your computer's data.
- Plug-in sandboxing. They're starting to do the same thing with browser plug-ins like Flash and PDF.