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Chrome Beta for Desktop Update

The Chrome team is excited to announce the promotion of Chrome 148 to the Beta channel for Windows, Mac and Linux. Chrome 148.0.7778.5 contains our usual under-the-hood performance and stability tweaks, but there are also some cool new features to explore - please head to the Chromium blog to learn more!

A partial list of changes is available in the Git log. Interested in switching release channels? Find out how. If you find a new issue, please let us know by filing a bug. The community help forum is also a great place to reach out for help or learn about common issues.

Chrome Release Team
Google Chrome

Extended Stable Updates for Desktop

 The Extended Stable channel has been updated to 146.0.7680.188 for Windows and Mac which will roll out over the coming days/weeks.


A full list of changes in this build is available in the log. Interested in switching release channels? Find out how here. If you find a new issue, please let us know by filing a bug. The community help forum is also a great place to reach out for help or learn about common issues.

Srinivas Sista
Google Chrome

Chrome for Android Update

    Hi, everyone! We've just released Chrome 147 (147.0.7727.49) for Android. It'll become available on Google Play over the next few days. 

This release includes stability and performance improvements. You can see a full list of the changes in the Git log. If you find a new issue, please let us know by filing a bug.


Android releases contain the same security fixes as their corresponding Desktop releases (Windows & Mac: 147.0.7727.55/.56, Linux:  147.0.7727.55) unless otherwise noted.

Harry Souders

Stable Channel Update for Desktop

 The Chrome team is delighted to announce the promotion of Chrome 147 to the stable channel for Windows, Mac and Linux. This will roll out over the coming days/weeks.

Chrome 147.0.7727.55 (Linux) 147.0.7727.55/56 Windows/Mac contains a number of fixes and improvements -- a list of changes is available in the log. Watch out for upcoming Chrome and Chromium blog posts about new features and big efforts delivered in 147.


Interested in switching release channels? Find out how here. If you find a new issue, please let us know by filing a bug. The community help forum is also a great place to reach out for help or learn about common issues.


Srinivas Sista

Google Chrome

TorchTPU: Running PyTorch Natively on TPUs at Google Scale

TorchTPU is a new engineering stack designed to provide a native, high-performance experience for running PyTorch workloads on Google’s TPU infrastructure with minimal code changes. It features an "Eager First" approach with multiple execution modes and utilizes the XLA compiler to optimize distributed training across massive clusters. Moving into 2026, the project aims to further reduce compilation overhead and expand support for dynamic shapes and custom kernels to ensure seamless scalability for the next generation of AI.