But where does that leave Mozilla's Firefox? Mitchell said Chrome will likely just help fuel confidence open-source software development, where code is not kept secret as it is in companies such as Microsoft and is open to peer review.
"It's a huge mistake to view this as a head-to-head battle of Firefox versus Chrome," Mitchell said. "There's plenty of space for more consumer choice. If it [Chrome] gains market share, it will take it from all around."
CIOs will probably be open to letting users install Chrome as enterprise applications become less dependent on a specific browser to run, Mitchell said. "The category of applications that are only supporting IE are declining anyway," he said.
Opera spokesman Tor Odland said Google the introduction of Chrome is fine as long as it adheres to Web standards. Apple declined to comment.
(Mikael Ricknas in Stockholm and Peter Sayer in Paris contributed to this report.)
More news, commentary, and predictions from The Industry Standard:
- Google pushes towards 70 percent of all U.S. searches; Yahoo, Microsoft push towards zero percent
- Google trying to stop the inevitable: Cyber-sex in Lively
- Why doesn’t Google build its own Digg like Yahoo and AOL did?
- Prediction: Google invests $1 billion in Facebook
- Prediction: Will John McCain pick former eBay CEO Meg Whitman for VP?
- Prediction: Carly Fiorina selected as McCain's running mate






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