We use Google Chrome primarily for research purposes. In our enterprise environment, we research articles, find competitors, and conduct normal industry research.
Google Chrome Enterprise is a very good solution since it is not too expensive. With the solution, we have access to Google Sheets and Google Docs, and we can share them with the entire company because every employee has a Gmail account, where we can meet each other with Google Meet. In general, it's a very good product.
Speaking about use cases, it's the predominant browser in the market. Also, it's the first choice for working with Google applications, like Google Workspace is the product we use the most, while the extensibility and manageability of Google Chrome when you have a browser that is enrolled and managed by your Google Workspace is fantastic as far as to restrict things and prevent people from loading any old random extension and whitelist and pre-install certain extensions for other people in your organization and also while being able to use them without having to get the tool themselves. It is a pretty direct, robust, and flexible solution. Also, the fact that Chrome is basically the commercially released public solution that resides on top of Chromium, which is used for a lot of other things as well. S, it means you've got a lot of great interoperability capabilities, and a lot of people's eyeballs are looking at the functionality and security of this product.
The idea is that if you look at an exam room now in a departmental clinic, in a hospital, you'll typically find that nurses and techs are going room to room with a laptop and they're not running a wired workstation. It's easier to run Chromebook. That's just now catching on. Quite a few institutions are starting to move this way and the reasoning is that if you're talking about lightweight cloud applications, for the most part, it runs very well. If they're running Epic EHR in the cloud or Cerner or whatever, it's much easier to run it on something like a Chrome OS-type situation where it's secure. You don't have anything on that device essentially.
Software Engineer at a tech services company with 1,001-5,000 employees
Real User
2021-06-14T17:59:41Z
Jun 14, 2021
Whenever we want to test one of our products, we are using this solution. When we have a new feature or changes, we test it on the browser. It comes with many extensions and we use it on a daily basis to do all our tests.
Google Chrome Enterprise combines Chrome OS and Chrome Browser to enable work in the cloud. Manage users’ access to data, applications, and extensions without breaking a sweat. Work securely from anywhere, on any device. Your data is kept safe in the cloud.
We use Google Chrome primarily for research purposes. In our enterprise environment, we research articles, find competitors, and conduct normal industry research.
I use the solution in my company as a browser.
I use the solution for browsing.
I use Google Chrome Enterprise since I previously bought Google Cloud Platform, where I store all my general data.
We use Google Chrome Enterprise to access the internet.
Google Chrome Enterprise is a very good solution since it is not too expensive. With the solution, we have access to Google Sheets and Google Docs, and we can share them with the entire company because every employee has a Gmail account, where we can meet each other with Google Meet. In general, it's a very good product.
Speaking about use cases, it's the predominant browser in the market. Also, it's the first choice for working with Google applications, like Google Workspace is the product we use the most, while the extensibility and manageability of Google Chrome when you have a browser that is enrolled and managed by your Google Workspace is fantastic as far as to restrict things and prevent people from loading any old random extension and whitelist and pre-install certain extensions for other people in your organization and also while being able to use them without having to get the tool themselves. It is a pretty direct, robust, and flexible solution. Also, the fact that Chrome is basically the commercially released public solution that resides on top of Chromium, which is used for a lot of other things as well. S, it means you've got a lot of great interoperability capabilities, and a lot of people's eyeballs are looking at the functionality and security of this product.
We primarily use the solution for email and other office tasks. It's used for internal user communication and various business operations.
Our primary use case for the solution for testing our web applications.
The idea is that if you look at an exam room now in a departmental clinic, in a hospital, you'll typically find that nurses and techs are going room to room with a laptop and they're not running a wired workstation. It's easier to run Chromebook. That's just now catching on. Quite a few institutions are starting to move this way and the reasoning is that if you're talking about lightweight cloud applications, for the most part, it runs very well. If they're running Epic EHR in the cloud or Cerner or whatever, it's much easier to run it on something like a Chrome OS-type situation where it's secure. You don't have anything on that device essentially.
Whenever we want to test one of our products, we are using this solution. When we have a new feature or changes, we test it on the browser. It comes with many extensions and we use it on a daily basis to do all our tests.