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Your front-row seat to the latest breakthroughs on the world’s most popular operating system.
At the Android Show 2026, we introduced Gemini Intelligence, proactive new AI features on Android.
Hi everyone! We've just released Chrome Stable 148 (148.0.7778.166) for iOS; it'll become available on App Store in the next few hours.
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.
Chrome Release Team
Google Chrome
Announced today during The Android Show, Android is transitioning from an operating system to an intelligence system, creating more opportunities for engagement with your apps. Through deep integration between hardware and software, Android devices will be able to handle the heavy lifting of anticipating user needs, so your app can focus on delivering that experience at the right moment. As part of this, we are announcing Gemini Intelligence, a suite of new features that bring the best of Gemini to our most advanced Android devices.
With Gemini Intelligence, we’re expanding Gemini’s ability to automate tasks across selected apps on behalf of the user with built-in transparency and control. This creates another avenue for user engagement, driving high-intent traffic to your app without requiring code or major engineering work from you. By allowing Gemini to navigate complex, multi-step tasks, such as ordering a latte from a cafe or building a shopping cart from a grocery list in a notes app, Gemini handles the logistics for users, so you’re free to focus on innovation and building great features.
We know there are times when people like to browse, and others when they want to quickly handle a task. Initially launched with selected food and ridesharing partners to build a grocery order or request a ride, this capability is expanding across more verticals and form factors, including foldables, watches, cars, and XR glasses.
Increase Engagement with AppFunctions
For more control over how agents interact with your app, you can use Android AppFunctions. This empowers you to provide specific tools, such as services, data, and actions directly to the OS and agents, paired with natural language descriptions. The system can then discover and execute these tools across form factors, enabling users to trigger your app’s functionality through the intelligence system for richer and more customized experiences with task automation. We’ve started testing these early stage APIs in a private preview with apps like KakaoTalk to enable users to “send messages” or “initiate voice calls” through this new framework. AppFunctions have already enabled local execution of 25 apps’ use cases across device manufacturers. You can experiment with the API locally and already register your interest to join the AppFunctions Early Access Program for full integration opportunities.
We’re providing multiple integration paths to meet you wherever you are on this intelligence journey, whether it’s with an effortless, “no-code change” app automation or using the AppFunctions API, to provide you with more control in an MCP-like fashion.
We’re elevating the user experience by expanding widget support to new form factors, starting with cars. This creates new opportunities for you to engage with users on 250M Android Auto compatible vehicles.
Jetpack Glance makes it easy to build high-quality widgets, and it is now getting powerful new capabilities thanks to a new underlying framework called RemoteCompose.
Furthermore, RemoteCompose is the engine behind Create My Widget, a feature where users can ask Gemini to build fully adaptive custom widgets that can be resized and optimized seamlessly for the user's home screen or Wear OS watch.
Building Adaptively Beyond the Phone
From foldables, tablets, compatible cars, and XR headsets to the new Googlebooks, the canvas for Android apps has expanded across screens and form factors. Here are some of the updates to help you build adaptively:
For device-differentiated experiences, take advantage of the latest updates to:
Car App Library: We’re streamlining development by expanding the Car App Library, which allows you to "build once" and deliver customized, distraction-optimized media experiences to both Android Auto and Android Automotive OS. We’re further enabling richer in-car engagement by expanding support for adaptive video apps, so that videos can played full screen when cars are parked.
Android XR SDK: The Android XR SDK allows you to build deeply differentiated, custom experiences for a growing spectrum of XR devices, including upcoming wired XR glasses (like XREAL’s Project Aura), while existing adaptive apps automatically surface in immersive environments without additional developmental effort. You can get ready for display glasses by using Jetpack Compose Glimmer to build glanceable UIs tailored for display glasses, alongside Jetpack Projected APIs to bridge app experiences from the phone to the user’s field of view. The developer preview 4 of the Android XR SDK, coming next week, introduces new interactive components like Title Chips and Button Groups that optimize input for glasses touchpads. It streamlines your workflow with the new ProjectedTestRule API to automate testing environments.
A New Age for Your Users on Android
From the shift to an intelligence system to the expansion of new form factors like Googlebooks, Android is creating new ways for people to get more out of their device experiences with developers and app makers at the center of it.
Gemini Intelligence features will roll out in waves as they become ready, starting with the latest Samsung Galaxy and Google Pixel phones this summer. They will also become available across your Android devices including your watch, car, glasses and laptops later this year.
Stay tuned for even more news about app development in this new era at Google I/O next week.
When responding to code review comments, responses like “Done,” “Updated,” or “Fixed” are commonly used to indicate addressing a suggestion. However, sometimes, a little extra context adds a lot of clarity.
Next time you resolve a code review comment, ask yourself: "Is how I addressed the comment completely obvious from the code change and comment thread?" If not, supplement your response with a brief note to clarify the “why” or “how.” Your reviewers will thank you.
When is it helpful to add context to a code review comment response? Here are a few examples:
Your code change doesn't fully explain how you addressed the comment. Providing a brief summary helps the reviewer verify the changes without re-examining every line of the delta, and creates a clearer historical record.
You made a design choice or trade-off that isn't self-evident. Capturing the reasoning behind a choice provides valuable context. Note that non-obvious design choices within the code should ideally be explained in code comments or the commit description as well.
An offline discussion influenced the solution. Briefly summarizing the outcome or key reasoning from an offline sync ensures that other reviewers, who only see the final code change, can grasp the “why”.
There are multiple ways to address the comment. Clearly stating which option you selected and the reasoning behind that choice over other alternatives helps reviewers.
Learn more code review practices in Google’s code review guide: google.github.io/eng-practices/review.
A new LTS-144 version 144.0.7559.250 (Platform Version: 16503.82.0), is being rolled out for most ChromeOS devices.
This version includes selected security fixes including:
484946544 High CVE-2026-3921: Use after free in TextEncoding.
491515787 High CVE-2026-5280: Use after free in WebCodecs.
485935314 High CVE-2026-3923: Use after free in WebMIDI.
488585488 High CVE-2026-4454: Use after free in Network.
492218537 High CVE-2026-5866: Use after free in Media.
496282147 High CVE-2026-6303: Use after free in Codecs.
496281816 High CVE-2026-5872: Use after free in Blink.
485397139 High CVE-2026-3922: Use after free in MediaStream.
496205576 High CVE-2026-5290: Use after free in Compositing.
494352590 High CVE-2026-7363: Use after free in Canvas.
489711638 High CVE-2026-5276: Insufficient policy enforcement in WebUSB.
Release notes for LTS-144 can be found here
Want to know more about Long-term Support? Click here
Andy Wu
Google Chrome OS
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