Your statement wasn't simply that Google is a potentially dangerous company (if it was, I would've agreed).
I didn't say Google is dangerous, potentially or otherwise. I said was that Orwell would make fun of Google. The man wrote a lot more than 1984.
You keep going back to Android, which I never even brought up. I own an Android phone and love it. But Android is 180 degrees from the Chrome OS, which is somewhat Orwellian, which is what I was talking about. It was asked here if you could use FF with Chrome. No. What else can you not do with the Chrome OS?
You can't run programs from your PC if you're offline.
You can't store Chrome data on your PC.
You can't update Chrome OS programs.
You can't install software on a Chrome OS.
You can't even download Android apps and install them on Chrome
You can't do squat with Chrome OS unless Google says you can.
You call that open?
What you're missing is that Chrome OS, despite it's name, is not being designed as a fully-functional operating system. I don't even know if it can run software in the traditional sense. It's designed as an OS-independent web browser that attains productivity through web apps. It's a very different concept than, say, an OS like Windows or Mac on the cloud. Chrome "OS" is no more of an operating system than the menu screen on my television (meaning, it's an OS in technical definition, but not in functionality). I wouldn't expect Chrome OS to do the things you mentioned anymore than I would expect Firefox or IE or Safari to do those things. It's a web browser.
According to Wikipedia, a platform is "hardware architecture and software framework (including application frameworks) that allows software to run." Thus, by that definition, Chrome OS isn't even a platform, and is therefore irrelevant to this discussion.
However, isn't Chrome OS going to be able to view web apps from any website, just like any browser can? I was not under the impression that only Google-developed web apps will work in it.
I've been doing a little reading about this so-called Cloud Computing when a thought occurred to me: Lets say that I subscribe to it and all of my personal data is out there some place. Then let's say that I die (which I will some day). Then let's say that I authorized no one to access my data. What happens to all that stuff out there---somewhere???????:huh:
Most likely the same thing that often happens to a person's various Internet personas when they die: nothing. It just sits there forever unless you did instruct a friend or relative to shut it all down for you in the event of your death. The only way this would be avoidable (I think) is if the government took over the whole thing and ran it like Social Security, where you get XX GB of storage when you're born, tied to your SS number, and it just goes away or gets reallocated when you die.
Oh crap ... I hope no one in DC reads that... :shock:
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7 Home Premium x64Intel Core i7-2600 @3.40GHz8.00GB DDR3NVIDIA GeForce GTX 555 w/1.0GB RAM
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Alienware X51
- OS
- Windows 7 Home Premium x64
- CPU
- Intel Core i7-2600 @3.40GHz
- Memory
- 8.00GB DDR3
- Graphics Card(s)
- NVIDIA GeForce GTX 555 w/1.0GB RAM
- Monitor(s) Displays
- BenQ XL2420TX
- Screen Resolution
- 1920x1080@120Hz
- Hard Drives
- 1TB
- PSU
- 330-watt
- Keyboard
- Logitech Wireless Illuminated Keyboard K800
- Mouse
- Razer Orochi
- Internet Speed
- Campus Internet

), but much of what they are currently doing is exercising power that Congress never gave them, and thus by definition they are doing so on orders from either the relevant office head, Secretary, or the President; that's why it's sparking so much contention.