Unfortunately, Chrome does not work with JAWS.  It's essentially icon 
driven, and is not compatible with screen readers.

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Lisa" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, September 03, 2008 3:07 PM
Subject: [Blind-Computing] Revieww of New Google Chrome Browser




While this article doesn't directly relate to accessibility we all have to
use a browser.  Before jumping on a browser bandwagon you might want to read
this article.
By PETER SVENSSON, AP Technology Writer Wed Sep 3, 12:05 AM ET
NEW YORK - Google Inc.'s new Web browser, called Chrome, does much of what a
browser
needs to do these days: It presents a sleek appearance, groups pages into
easy-to-manage
"tabs" and offers several ways for people to control their Internet privacy
settings.
Yet my initial tests reveal that this "beta," or preliminary release, falls
short
of 's goals, and is outdone in an important measure by the latest version of
Microsoft
Corp.'s Internet Explorer.
Chrome is a challenge to Microsoft's browser, used by about three-quarters
of Web
surfers. But it could equally be called a challenge to Microsoft's Office
software
suite, because what Google really wants to do is to make the browser a
stable and
flexible platform that can do practically everything we want to do with a
computer,
from word processing and e-mail to photo editing.
To strengthen that effort, Chrome was designed to improve on the way other
browsers
handle JavaScript, one of the technologies used to make Web pages more
interactive
and more like desktop software applications. Google's online word processing
and
spreadsheet programs use this technology, but it's also very widely deployed
on Web
pages to do less sophisticated things, like drop-down menus.
At first blush, Google's focus on JavaScript makes sense. JavaScript can eat
up computer
processor power, and if poorly used by a Web site, can bring down the
browser. One
of the things Chrome promises is that if one browser tab crashes, it won't
take down
the whole program.
Chrome also has some cosmetic differences from Internet Explorer and
Firefox, like
putting the tabs at the very top of the window. That's a nice move, but it's
the
browser's performance that really matters to me. And this is where Chrome's
attention
to JavaScript might miss the point.
At work, I often have 40 or 50 tabs open in Firefox, grouped in different
windows
depending on which topic they pertain to. Frequently, Firefox would slow
down all
the other applications on my computer, then seize up completely.
At first I thought JavaScript was to blame, and blocked it from running. But
that
made many sites unusable, and it didn't help: The browser still froze.
It turns out the culprit is not JavaScript but another technology used to
make Web
pages more interactive: Adobe Systems Inc.'s Flash plug-in. It's the
program-within-a-program
that plays and those annoying "splash" pages that some sites employ to
dazzle you
with animations before letting you do anything useful on the site.
Flash is a tremendous resource hog in Firefox, eating up processor time to
the point
where there is nothing left for other programs. It does this even if you're
not actively
doing anything. Merely having a page open on your screen will suck power
from your
computer's central processing unit, or CPU. This is outrageous behavior for
a browser.
It's my CPU and I want it back.
Luckily, there's a small add-on program for Firefox that lets the user
prevent Flash
files from running automatically when a page loads, and it turns Firefox
into a stable,
efficient browser.
What does this mean on Chrome? Well, it has the same problem. It lets sites
running
Flash take over your computer's resources. It doesn't hog the CPU quite as
bad as
with Firefox, but in a way, it's more serious, because unlike with Firefox,
there's
no way to stop Flash from running. Chrome's controls are quite bare-bones,
perhaps
because it's still in "beta."
On the plus side, Chrome allows you to diagnose problems with runaway
plug-ins easily,
because it tells you exactly which pages are consuming which resources. Had
I been
able to do this with Firefox, it would have saved me from months of browser
troubles.
So which one comes out smelling like roses? The beta of Internet Explorer 8,
released
just last week.
When playing a , Firefox 3 took up 95 percent of the CPU time on a
three-year old
laptop running Windows XP.
Chrome came in at 60 percent — still too much. Especially since owns
YouTube! You'd
think it could make its browser work well with that site in particular.
Internet Explorer barely broke a sweat, taking up just a few percent.
When I told each browser to load eight pages, some of which were heavy with
Flash
and graphics, Firefox took 17 seconds and ended with a continuous CPU load
of 50
percent. That means it took up half of my available processing power, even
if I wasn't
looking at any of the pages.
Chrome loaded them the fastest, at 12 seconds, and ended with a CPU load of
about
40 percent.
Internet Explorer 8 took 13 seconds to load, but ended with no CPU load at
all.
So while Chrome's performance is a little better than that of Firefox, in
practical
terms, it is far less useful, because it lacks the broad array of
third-party add-ons
programs like Flashblock that make Firefox so customizable. With time, it
might catch
up, but in the meantime, I'd recommend giving the new Internet Explorer a
spin.


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 Visit the JAWS Users List home page at:
 http://www.jaws-users.com
Visit the Blind Computing home page at:
http://www.blind-computing.com
 Address for the list archives:
 http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
 To post to this group, send email to
 [email protected]
 To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 For help from Mailman with your account Put the word help in the subject 
 or body of a blank message to:
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Use the following address in order to contact the management team
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
If you wish to join the JAWS Users List send a blank email to the 
 following address:
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