Webcomic About Google's New Browser
Sep. 2nd, 2008 04:47 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Google has its own web browser now, called Chrome. Read their comic book about it. It's a prime example of presentation comics, which I described a few weeks ago. Think to yourself what it would have been like if Google had presented you with a page of pure text instead. Throughout reading it, I was thinking they obviously had been reading Scott McCloud's works. I got to the last page and it turns out Scott McCloud adapted it to a comic. My admiration for the Chrome comic knows no bounds.
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Date: 2008-09-02 11:06 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-03 01:56 am (UTC)I have a raised eyebrow for all the references to automobiles and the internal combustion engine, though. In particular, naming something "V8" in the post-SUV era seems so....twentieth-century of them. What used to be a symbol of raw power is now a metaphor for crippling fuel efficiency. Wake up, Google!
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Date: 2008-09-03 03:56 pm (UTC)And the comic is interesting too... ;P
Seriously, I was impressed by how easy the comic was to read, and it presented a lot of technical information in an easy-to-consume package. While the average person might not understand everything they're saying, the illustrations seemed very helpful even if the concepts might not be familiar.
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Date: 2008-09-04 05:07 pm (UTC)-- Sarah Elkins
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Date: 2008-09-06 02:06 am (UTC)It troubles me as well.
To think we are getting to the point that we need to explain things with pictures is a sad statement on the intellect of the population.
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Date: 2008-09-06 02:32 am (UTC)Writing words alone takes less time than adding illustration, so that form is something that respects the time of the writer at the expense of the reader. The plain fact is, we don't learn less through comics, we learn more and better in less time, at the expense of Google doing more work in the form of illustrations.
Why is that good in this case?
Because Google is trying to convince you of something. You are being persuaded. Why let them do that? You are giving something to them: your attention. So you deserve a comic.
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Date: 2008-09-06 02:32 am (UTC)