The Verge

Google is speeding up Chrome's release cycle to every four weeks

The Verge logo The Verge 5/03/2021 11:37:20 Tom Warren
a close up of electronics © Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

Google says it will speed up how it releases Chrome updates. Starting with Chrome 94 in Q3, 2021, Google will release milestones of its browser every four weeks, instead of every six weeks. This is the first time Google has sped up its Chrome release schedule for more than a decade.

"As we have improved our testing and release processes for Chrome, and deployed bi-weekly security updates to improve our patch gap, it became clear that we could shorten our release cycle and deliver new features more quickly," explains Alex Mineer, a technical program manager at Chrome.

IT admins can stick to an eight-week version of Chrome

While consumers will see a new version of Chrome every month, IT administrators will be able to opt for a new Extended Stable option that includes milestone releases every eight weeks. Extended Stable will be available for enterprise administrators and Chromium embedders that need the extra time to manage updates in their environments. Important security updates will still arrive every two weeks in this version, but Extended Stable should hopefully avoid the situation where silent Chrome experiments end up angering IT admins.

Google says it's also planning "multiple stable release options" for Chrome OS, and will share details with Chrome OS admins in the coming months.

It's not yet clear how Chromium contributors like Brave and Microsoft will handle their own releases of Chromium browsers in response to Google's changes. We've reached out to both Brave and Microsoft to comment on Google's new Chrome release schedule, and we'll update you accordingly.

vendredi 5 mars 2021 13:37:20 Categories: The Verge

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