Coleman Research Group’s Technology, Media & Telecom department highlights Googles plan for Chrome 5 and Twitter pokes at Facebook’s marketing future

Coleman Research Group’s Technology, Media & Telecom Group facilitates consultations between our clients (institutional investors) and leading technology professionals on a wide variety of topics including semiconductors, data storage and security, computer hardware and software, satellite system operators, telecom equipment, cable and wireless providers, and advertising spending.

Our TMT network spans technology industries across the globe and includes CTOs, CIOs, marketing and business development executives, engineers, buyers, and resellers.

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What’s Google planning for Chrome 5?

After a year and a half, Chrome has come a long way toward matching the features of better-established browsers. Now, with version 5 coming together, a lot of Google’s work focuses on advancing the state of the browser art.

The new Chrome 5 is available in beta now for Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux, not that most Chrome users will ever have to know the version number if Google has anything to do with it. Chrome versions are called “milestones”–fleeting waypoints along an unfinished journey to a better browser. But what exactly will moving into the rear-view mirror once Chrome 5 is finished?

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Twitter pokes at Facebook’s marketing future

Facebook is squaring off with Twitter once again for the attention of the social media world, and we’re about to see one heck of a marketing land grab. A new Twitter home page, designed to make the site friendlier to new users, debuted recently.

There have been all sorts of strange little revelations about Facebook popping up all over the Web recently: earlier this week, a bunch of documents that Facebook was distributing to advertisers, explaining the company’s forthcoming language change in on-site marketer materials from “Become a Fan Of” to simply “Like.” Previously, there had been a report that Facebook’s ‘like’ button will be unleashed to the Web at large.

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