
"Starting in September, Google's Chrome browser will receive a new release every two weeks, the company has announced. Since 2021, Chrome has been on a four-week release schedule for new major versions."
"The rationale for the faster two-week cycle is to enable faster delivery of performance improvements, bug fixes, security updates, and new features to both users and developers, the company said."
"Although updates will be more frequent, each individual update will contain fewer changes; that, according to Google, should reduce the risk of problems and make it easier to troubleshoot any issues after launch."
Google announced that Chrome will transition to a two-week release schedule for major versions, accelerating from the current four-week cycle that has been in place since 2021. This change aims to deliver performance improvements, bug fixes, security updates, and new features more rapidly to users and developers. By releasing updates more frequently with fewer changes per update, Google expects to reduce the risk of introducing problems and simplify troubleshooting when issues arise after launch.
Read at Computerworld
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