
Sixteen of the hundred themes now available for Chrome. (Credit: Screenshot by Stephen Shankland/CNET)
I'm a little confused. Is Chrome supposed to be a minimally intrusive window
to the Web or a splashy showcase for your favorite graphical style?
If you're in the latter camp, the type of person who picks desktop wallpaper
carefully and reskins every software that can be reskinned, you'll be pleased
with Google's unveiling Monday of
artist
themes for its Chrome browser. If you're the more utilitarian sort, avoid
clicking on the
Themes Gallery
page.
These two possible attitudes aren't mutually exclusive, but they do live
awkwardly together in Chrome. For an artistic canvas, Google's browser has only
a minimal menu bar across the top, and it's often obscured by tabs. The best
opportunity to show off some graphical pizzazz is the new-tab page, which
perhaps someday will become some all-purpose Google portal page but for now is
just a means to getting to some other Web page as fast as possible.

Mariah Carey gets her own Google Chrome theme. (Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET)
But Marissa Mayer, Google's vice president of search and user experience,
enjoys any opportunity to promote her fondness for fashion and art. Who else
could have been behind the
Oscar
de la Renta,
Chloe,
Kate
Spade, and
Dolce
& Gabbana themes?
A total of 100 new themes are now an option alongside the less eye-catching
themes that Google already offered
on its own. Mayer's status as patron of the arts only goes so far, though:
Several artists declined the opportunity to give their work to Google for free,
according to
The New York
Times.
Themes are just eye candy, though perhaps HTML5's built-in audio support will
add another dimension someday. Nevertheless, plenty of people care passionately
about themes as a way to lighten up their computing experience or display
loyalty to some cause. (Any
Porsche
fans out there?) One feature in Firefox 3.6, codenamed Namoroka and about to enter
beta testing, is the advancement of the Personas visual customization tool from
plug-in to built-in.
I ran into a few snags. The menu-bar text of
Mariah
Carey's Memoirs of an Imperfect Angel theme was only visible on a very wide
monitor, with Chrome not maximized and few tabs showing. With the
Takora
Kimiyoshi Futori theme, I couldn't read status bar pop-up text such as a Web
address I hovered over with my mouse. And switching from one theme to another
changed the menu bar but not an already visible new-tab page, producing an even
more jarring opportunity for visual cacophony.
I generally don't use themes, but I have to say I'm glad they exist. They
enable a certain whimsy and help add a bit of spice to a computing experience
that can be very impersonal.
Via
CNET Blogs
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