
Google Chrome was released on September 2, 2008. That means the browser is more than four-years-old. Google is only celebrating today, however, since its browsers birthday fell on a Sunday that happened to be part of a long weekend. The result is the Chrome Time Machine, which attempts to ātrack Chromeās journey from a better web to your web.ā
The new site lets you travel through key moments in Chromeās short history over the past four years. Oh, and since Google is feeling generous, you may even get a special birthday gift from the Chrome team if you find the hidden clue and type in āthe secret code.ā
The search giant played up the fact that while Chrome first launched on Windows, itās now on multiple platforms:
Fast forward to today, and many people have more than one deviceāa smartphone, a tablet, a computer at work, a computer at home. The beauty of the web is that itās the one platform that can deliver a consistent experience on any device with a browser. Weāve been working to build a more seamless Chrome experience that lets you to take your Chrome stuff with you on all your devices.
The web isnāt the same for everyoneāwe all have our own individual bookmarks, tabs, history, passwords and more that reflect what we do online and what we care about. Chrome now enables you to access your web, everywhere. Whether youāre on a Windows, Mac, or Linux computer, a Chromebook, or an Android or iOS smartphone or tablet, you can have the same consistent experience no matter where you go, just by signing in to Chrome.
This got me into a cross-platform mood. I tried accessing the site with Microsoftās Internet Explorer 9 (just for fun) and the page didnāt load completely. My colleague Paul Sawers tried using Mozilla Firefox and got this error message: āYouāll need a Chrome browser to reach 88mphā¦ā Hereās a screenshot in case all you use is Google Chrome:

Google of course doesnāt have to test this website with other browsers, given that itās just a tribute to Chrome. Then again, itās not the best way to show you support Web standards. The point is to be able to access the same Web from any device using any browser, not any device using Chrome.
I guess I shouldnāt be surprised that the page has a Google+ icon, but nothing for Facebook and Twitter. I guess I wonāt be sharing it then.
Update at 5:00PM EST: Sundar Pichai, Googleās Senior Vice President of Chrome and Apps, has put a very cool idea into action. āThe team is putting together 10000 lego pieces for a 5 ft version of Chrome logo:) To celebrate chromeās fourth birthday, thanks for all of those who helped us get here.ā Theyāre just getting started:

See also: Chrome overtakes Internet Explorer as most used browser for the first full calendar month ever: StatCounter and Chrome poised to overtake IE as most popular browser in the UK; Safari rising worldwide
Image credit: stock.xchng
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