Has it really increased that much? (Or are our computers really that old?) But this development has us pondering the speed of obsolescence. ![]() Most times when folks talk about the speed of computers, it's Moore's law – the theory that processor speeds double every two years. And even if we could, like many reading this at work, we'd still need our IT department's approval – and don't even get us started on that.) Not even your faithful Horizons team can download Chrome here in the office. Oh, and those who've kept an older PowerPC-based Mac alive by upgrading to a newer OS? You're doomed to dullness, too – no Chrome for you. ![]() What's that mean? Unless you upgraded your Mac's operating system in the last two years, you're stuck Chrome-less. For Macs, Chrome requires Mac OS 10.5 or newer – Leopard and Snow Leopard for the animal types among us. When this tech blogger saw the announcement, that the long-awaited, really-official-this-time Google Chrome had finally been released for Mac and Linux after living in the realm of PC-only for more than a year, there was one jubilant moment of excitement – and then a crush of doom.Ĭhrome, the speedy, secure, lightweight browser had finally come to the Monitor office's operating system of choice.īut not so fast.
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