Peter,

Your analysis does not make sense, if Google is really going to
support many platforms, particularly Linux.  There is little
difference between the W2K and XP kernels.  There is a substantial
difference between the XP and Linux kernels.

To make sense of your argument, it must be supposed that there will be
large differences between the versions for each platform, with the
Windows version continuing to depend on proprietary Microsoft
libraries.  

That leads to a question of whether Google is at all sincere in
developing a platform-independent browser.  If you were, you would
maximize the amount of common code and minimize the amount of code
that depended on a particular platform.  But basing Chrome on
proprietary Microsoft libraries is doing just the opposite.  You will
have to create the functionality of those libraries under Linux.  If
you did base the functionality on the kernel, there would not be a
significant difference between W2K and XP.

I would like the ability to look at the dependancies to understand
what the common code needs from the host OS, but I have to interpret
your excuse as indicating that Chrome is heavily dependent on
proprietary features Microsoft has built into XP and Vista, and that
is precisely what I want to avoid.

I have taken your advice, and in spite of your refusal to help, I did
find Kent Walker's email address.  I hope he takes copyright
infringement and misrepresentation more seriously than you.

I hope there is truly an open source version available that works on a
platform other than Windows.  I'll take another look then.

Ken

On Wed, 10 Sep 2008 12:56:39 -0700, you wrote:

>On Wed, Sep 10, 2008 at 12:44 PM, burgersoft777 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:
>
>> When you take account of the size of
>> the 2k user base I would have thought goggle would have bent over
>> backwards to help. Its not to late to change direction and do
>> something for the users rather than act as an agent of MS effectively
>> attempting to fool users into changing an OS that remains more than up
>> to the task of running your browser.
>
>
>Much as I love a good conspiracy theory, acting as an agent of
>Microsoft wasn't the deciding factor here.  Win2k lacks a large number of
>APIs Chromium uses, especially with regard to the sandbox (but also in a
>number of other core and UI functions).  We intended to support win2k for a
>long time and only changed our minds after it became clear that the
>engineering cost would be very large and ongoing (despite your assertions to
>the contrary).
>
>Also, the size of the win2k user base is not, in fact, particularly
>large, and many of these users are in locked-down corporate environments
>where Chromium will have little penetration.
>
>I don't have a ton of sympathy here.  Electing to run an
>eight-year-old operating system is a choice that carries many tradeoffs with
>it, including no support from the manufacturer and an inability to run
>various newer programs, including Chromium.  I think there are more
>impactful changes we can spend our effort on as a development community.
> Obviously, if a fully-working port and an ongoing maintainer are both
>available, the cost of this choice is reduced, and the decision might
>change.
>
>PK
>
>

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