
"Google said the project reflects growing interest in combining the open-source Chromium foundation with Google's broader ecosystem of tools and services. The company wrote that the release "addresses the growing demand for a browsing experience that combines the benefits of the open-source Chromium project with the Google ecosystem of apps and features.""
"Until now, Linux users on ARM64 hardware have typically relied on Chromium or various workarounds to access Chrome-like browsing. Some have even used emulation to run the standard x86 version of Chrome, which often consumes more system resources. With the official ARM64 build, users will be able to run Chrome directly on their systems without those extra steps."
"In the announcement, the company explained that the project was a major effort, describing it as "a significant undertaking to ensure that ARM64 Linux users receive the same secure, stable, and rich Chrome experience found on other platforms." Google says the new version will deliver the same deep integration with its services that Chrome users already get on other devices."
Google announced that Chrome will officially support ARM64 Linux devices starting in the second quarter of 2026, marking the first native release for this architecture. This follows previous ARM support launches on macOS in 2020 and Windows in 2024. Linux users with ARM64 processors have previously relied on Chromium or emulation to access Chrome. The native build will eliminate workarounds and resource-intensive emulation, delivering the same secure, stable experience available on other platforms. Users will gain full Google ecosystem integration, including account synchronization for bookmarks, browsing history, and open tabs across devices.
#chrome-arm64-support #linux-browser-development #google-ecosystem-integration #cross-platform-compatibility
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