Woke up this morning at 9:30am, headed out the door at 10am and went for my 8km walk – it felt good getting back into a routine again. I arrived back home and jumped onto my computer to see whether Google had release a Chrome update which they had – upgrading it from 148.0.7778.97 to 148.0.7778.168 (link) and as of the time of writing this blog Google haven’t released what security fixes they have made but given the jump from x.97 to x.168 it makes me wonder whether we’ll see a big lot of fixes like what we saw when the upgrade from 147 to 148 was released last week which included quite a number of critical fixes.
Google has had their I/O Keynote today and there were some interesting announcements with a lot of focus on AI. The Googlebook being geared up as a replacement to Chrome OS (it’ll be interesting to see whether we’ll see mini PCs with Qualcomm SoCs running the new operating system) but details are scarce regarding things such as whether Chrome for Android will include extension support. I’m going to assume that it will include extension support given the number of enterprise customers I know of that make use of Chrome OS desktop mini PCs and have extensions as part of their work flow. As I’ve noted in a past post there was an announcement in changes coming to Chrome for Android such as ‘SharedWorker on Android’ and other functionality that MV3 extensions make use of. Given that it is also available in the WebView itself given that third party browsers that use the system WebView provide extension support then I guess it is just a matter of Google enabling it.
When it comes to Android and the use of AI, thank god Google is actually showing how AI can be used for something useful other than aimlessly wasting electricity on a sycophantic chat bot. What has been showed off were things like how AI can improve AI auto-fill which is particularly useful when it comes to filing in forms where the website isn’t perfectly aligned with form details that are saved in the browser. I would also hazard to guess that the AI being used to improve auto-fill should also help when it comes to password management and filling in details when logging in through an app on your phone – all too often I see the password manager struggle to match up my login details to the app that I’m trying to login with thus requiring to open up the password manager to them manually copy and paste the details across. As I’ve said in the past, people don’t care about AI for AI sake but rather what it enables – if it means that their voice activated control works better than that is a win for the consumer.
On a side note, I’ve been reading articles and watching YouTube videos of people complaining about the Pixel 11 and how G6 SoC won’t be some sort of earth shattering revolution. The simple fact of the matter is that for the average consumer they want a phone that is responsive, a reliable network connection, good battery life and a great screen – the average person doesn’t sit around running benchmarks all day and then spending time debating on Reddit over whose phone is faster. Once again you have people who have their head firmly planted up their backside as they ignore what the average person actually wants and/or needs. I can understand people have opinions but the way in which too many talk online about things make it sound as though they’re making objective statements of fact when reality it is just an opinion based on what their own needs are.





