The Big Story Google’s suite of workplace products has been getting chopped up by productivity startups for years, but ambitions are expanding as investors look for new opportunities in software. Productivity has been an especially hot for investment in the past year or two. Take a look at Notion and you’ll see a highly-valued company with a big vision structured around shaping how users thing about docs and wikis. The reality is if you look at the long list of features offered by G Suite, you’ll see the template for success for an increasingly lengthy list of venture-backed competitors that are tackling a specific bullet point in its list of offerings, revamping that service and charging a premium for startups desperate for fine-tuned products. Lately the interest seems to have moved beyond the low-hanging fruit, with startups now looking to build products that can replace or augment Gmail, Google Calendar, and perhaps most ambitiously, Google Chrome. This week in a piece for Extra Crunch, I dove into the commodification of web browsers and how new startups are aiming to find niches inside Chrome’s one-size-fits-all approach. I talked to several entrants in the browser world, some of whom had raised tens of millions in venture capital, some hundreds of thousands, and some who wouldn’t say. Here’s a look into one of the startups I chatted with, you can read the rest by signing up for an Extra Crunch subscription. Mighty As front-end developers have gotten more ambitious and web applications have gotten more complex, Chrome has earned the reputation of being quite the RAM hog. Mighty is building a $20/month version of Google Chrome that is completely remote-rendered, streaming the app from a server farm, offloading a user's memory-intensive and battery-consuming network of browser tabs in the process, allowing users to run 100 tabs without bogging down their CPUs. Doshi tells TechCrunch that the startup's browser can decrease Chrome's CPU usage by 10 times. "This is a new kind of technology entirely and it's really hard to build. It's not a simple reskin of a browser or a couple new UI/UX flourishes that anyone can copy," Doshi said in a text conversation. "Our focus is making a few users really happy and we're getting very close to something we'll start deploying widely. Probably within the next 6 months." |
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