"They've chosen not to ship yet," said Shaver, talking about plug-ins for the two browsers. Shaver said that Chrome Frame, which is open source, includes technologies that could be destined for Firefox as well as Opera Software's Opera browser. Google developers claimed they spent "countless hours" tweaking Wave for IE, but gave up in favor of producing a plug-in instead. Specifically, Google said it created Chrome Frame because it wasn't worth the time and trouble to make its new collaboration and communications tool, Google Wave, work with IE. Google pitched the plug-in as a way to instantly boost the speed of the notoriously slow IE and as a means for Web developers to support standards IE can't handle, including HTML 5. 23, currently only supports IE6, IE7 and IE8, and lets those Microsoft browsers utilize the Chrome browser's WebKit rendering engine, as well as its V8 JavaScript engine. Chrome Frame, which Google launched Sept.
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